LOOKING BACK – THANK YOU TO MY MENTORS
No one in life is an island. Obviously, there are different mentors for different purposes. I have had mentors with regards to helping me to create a foundation as a person. Obviously, my parents, some specific teachers and particular friends have helped me with respect to this. I have been in the photography field for some 29 years. A girl I almost married, actually motivated me to buy my first camera. On the most part, I stayed within a small area from Nashua , NH . This girl was from England and was visiting the USA . We started making trips far outside my comfort zone, which is where I began my photography.
One year later, a prospective model who was working at the Manor IV in Nashua , NH asked me to take some pictures for her portfolio. I really had no idea what I was doing. I started reading books and started experimenting. She introduced me to 5 other people who believed that they had something to make it a career. Although they gave me a lot of credit in marketing them to NYC based agencies, I think it may have been a lot of luck. I contend that they did far more for me than what I did for them. They introduce me to the top fashion photographers of NYC (See Attached List) and most definitely the world. I met them through their forum which was usually at the RCA Building , The Cadillac Bar, and a number of other places. I began to sit in on sessions and observed. They began putting me on the spot and I would plug in my camera to take a couple of images at their shoots. I even took a couple of images for actually assignments that were published. They included me on their mailings and I was invited to industry events such as the invitation attached to Studio 54. Some of events were fashion shows, premieres, and just parties. I actually accumulated a huge file of candid images of celebrities and people who were the operators of the business such as Ad Executes, Camera people, Producers, and Music People.
More important, I learned what I see so many photographers lacking in South Florida ; which is the ability to take the right model, with the right clothes matching with the right environment. My main area of photography these days is the COLLAGES. Although the COLLAGES are a series of images that make a story, still, the individual images making up the collages are critical to make it work. Some of these photographers are long since gone, but some of these people are also now educators and give presentations. I recently communicated with Jack Reznicki and expressed my appreciation to him. I now sell me artwork in some 26 stores, with a future one in William , AZ and negotiations with a large store chain that are in all of the commercial airports. Much of my work is tourist based and I sell in many merchandising forms (see attached pictures). I have begun also publishing my own Coffee Table Books.
I have attached a couple of pictures of an Indian shoot which I will be creating a Frontier Collage. In this collage will be images of the Old West (ghost towns), Little Bighorn, and re-enactments of the old west, stage coaches, OK Corral, Log Cabins, and some other historic sites.
Photographers that influenced me:
- Francisco Scavullo
- Richard Avedon
- Jay Maesel
- Steve Meisel
- Jack Reznicki
- Annie Leibowitz
- Bruce Webber
- Marco Glaviano
- Gilles Bensimon
- Greg Gorman
- Toscani
- Albert Mackenzie Watson
- Jean Renard
- Douglas Hopkins
- Tom Hooper
- Patrick DeMarchelier
- Peggy Sirota
- Harry Langdon
- Joyce Tenneson
- Lynn Goldsmith
- Michel Comte
- Andrea Alperts
- Peter Lindbergh
- Herb Ritts
- Tom Lohman
- Harry Benson
- Bill King
- Jennifer Baumann
- Andrew Eccles
- Robert Farber
- Giacomo Giannini
- Les Goldberg
- Lee Page
- Michael Pateman
- John Pemberton
- John McDonough
- Paul Lange
- Jacques Silberstein
- Arthur Algort
- Eric Bowman
- Rudolf Von Domele
- Marc Baptiste
Mark,
ReplyDeleteMy sincere thanks for considering me as one of your mentors, especially with such an illustrious list of my contemporaries.
Keep those books & collections growing and you, too, will be a mentor to the next generation.
Be good to yourself.
Douglas Hopkins