Archive Page 5

26
Sep
11

Soriah, Jill Tracy, and Mercury’s Antennae at the Red Devil Lounge

I first heard Soriah at Orbis Nex when that place still existed. The room was full of thick fog and was lit by candles. Accompanied by dancers wearing feathers, his voice vibrated through the room. It was an intense and magical night. When Jill Tracy announced that she was performing with Soriah, I knew I had to go.

They performed at the Red Devil Lounge last Wednesday (September 21, 2011). The red and black space felt perfect for this show.

The night opened with a set by Mercury’s Antennae.

Jill Tracy performed next. Any night that I get to attend one of her performances is truly a delight. Soriah joined her on stage for a song or two, which was beautiful.

Soriah is a performer of Khöömei (Tuvan Throat Singing). Listening to his set was more like being transported to another place than listening to music. I overheard someone at the show say that it was a full-body experience. This felt true for me as well.

Continue reading ‘Soriah, Jill Tracy, and Mercury’s Antennae at the Red Devil Lounge’

20
Sep
11

In Lace Shadows: Portraits of Jill Tracy


In June, I worked with Jill Tracy, to create this series of photographs. For those unfamiliar with her work, head over to her Bandcamp page and get her music. She tells stories with the piano and her magnificent voice. Once you have her music playing, come back here for the photos.

Over tea, Jill and I spoke of staircases and how we’re both inspired by them. These are transitional spaces, disconnected from the spaces they connect. Defined by the shape of human movement, they contain within them many small levels. This was a perfect space to play with shadows. The shape of the space causing them to expand and contract, and to fall in and out of focus. Using a projection method, described in greater detail in my previous post and on Mike Estee’s blog, pieces of lace were used to create intricate shadows.

Photography: Audrey Penven
Model: Jill Tracy
Design and Construction of Slide!Flash: Mike Estee and Audrey Penven
Assistance in setting up the shoot: Eli Rosseter and Aaron Muszalski

21
Jun
11

Lace Shadows

This is a preview of my recent shoot with Jill Tracy. The full set will be up soon.

It wouldn’t be a real project without some last minute fabrication adventure. To create the lace projection, I started with a slide projector from the 1970s and some scraps of lace. Testing showed me that the projector was bright enough to use as a light source without a tripod. Since I didn’t know if I’d be able to easily find power on location, I planned on using the Vagabond Mini battery pack that goes with the Paul C. Buff Einstein strobes. Mike Estee looked at what I was planning to do and informed me there was no chance of those objects working together successfully.

There was a few hours left before the shoot, so we decided to solve this problem. Could we pull out the slide projector bulb and shove a flash head in there? What about a different lens to make the projection larger? What about starting from scratch, firing up Solid Works and designing a box to mount on the front of the flash head? Salvaging the lens mount from a busted Canon 20D, Mike and I worked together to design this thing. He headed over to Tech Shop and cut the pieces out of a sheet of acrylic. A few hours later, after some lasering and taping, we had a slide projector for a flash head.

As expected with version 1.0 of anything, it wasn’t perfect. Being made of acrylic, it gets really hot when the modeling light is on. Also, I learned why there’s a fan in the slide projector. Without any way of shielding slides from the heat, they melt after about fifteen seconds of the modeling light being on. Oops. Version 2 will be made of metal, will have a fan, and perhaps some IR glass to block out some of the heat.

It totally worked out for the shoot though. I just used the modeling light sparingly and focused quickly. There was a lot of guessing in composing shots, but it wasn’t the first time I worked with an unpredictable process.

Mike Estee wrote a great blog post about our Slide!Flash, v1.0. The files are included in case you want to make your own! Let us know if you do and if you make any improvements.




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Yesterday I photographed some art by @okayokay. Now it's on his website. Check it out: http://t.co/sRZTdkpH
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I've photographed many @CannedCorpus shows. I'd be delighted if more people could experience this: http://t.co/S2sBbbVU http://t.co/qckQgPzy
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