35. Amateur Urban Archeology

My internal label for what I do, wondering the city, eye drawn to accumulation, accretion, sedimentary layers of signage.  Accidental evidence.  Inadvertent poetry.  

This Bell + Arrow in London pairs with the Bell + Arrow in Pasadena (part of "23 Very Short Stories").

London

London

33. Dot

Principal photography on our movie together was completed last night.  Dot celebrated by smashing a cupcake in my face, echoing the scene in the movie where Richard sticks his face in a birthday cake, which is a revisiting of me sticking my head in my birthday cake at age 15.

Dot (London)

Dot (London)

 

28. A Strip Mall Stripped Bare

This is the landscape I grew up in.  You already know me as a fan of the missing sign.  I like how the symmetry of the building is disturbed by the mismatched symmetry of the parking lot.  For me this picture gets stranger the longer that I look at it.

Houston

Houston

27. Missing Sign, Houston

I love empty sign frames, and there seem to be a lot of them in Houston, perhaps because of the periodic hurricanes.  Nothing like a little rust and some bougainvillea to make for a bit of Southern Gothic.

Houston

Houston

26. Roman Way, Hertfordshire, UK

This photo was taken at the end of family hike through the kind of picturesque countryside I never find photographically picturesque.  I'm much more interested in a collision or the intrusion or at the presence of the humans.  This cul de sac looks like a stage set.  On some level it is.  I was shooting with my Lumix pocket camera and I was damn lucky that the dog's paw is so perfectly posed.  I count the triangulation of the three central figures as dumb luck and good fortune.  

Roman Way, Hertfordshire, UK

Roman Way, Hertfordshire, UK

25. Mohawk Fishing Bugbrooke

The room likely remains white and silent.  I'm getting ready to shoot a movie, start date is five weeks from Monday, so not a time of great loquacity.  

I took this picture in Bugbrooke, on the canal by the train tracks.  Something about the Mohawk and the stocky body and the angle of the rod and the delicate lure and the harsh surface of the water.  I always wonder if I can really describe what is fundamentally intuitive about why an image works for me.

Bugbrooke, England

Bugbrooke, England

24. Trapped on Tottenham Court Road

Wandering London, impecunious, deluded that I was a flaneur, I packed my camera, a bottle of water, perhaps a sandwich, an Oyster card, a map, and something to read on the tubefor a day of wandering.  My curfew was to be back in Queens Park by 3 PM to pickup my kids from primary school (the only white man in a  sea of berkas).  As a point of prideful asceticism, I took a private vow not to spend a nickel on my wanders, or to perhaps indulge in a candy bar.  

London

London

23. Never Mow Or Water Again!

This is the companion photo to "Learn Stand Up Comedy" which is in the "23 Very Short Stories" series.  In fact I shot this photo on the same stretch of hardscrabble Thousand Oaks roadside.  It's spatially and tonally contiguous.

Never Mow Or Water Again! (Thousand Oaks)​

Never Mow Or Water Again! (Thousand Oaks)​

22. A last family photo on Queensloch

The house on Queensloch (Houston, Texas) is for me the defining house of my childhood, though we moved there when I was 13.  I left when I was 17 to go to college, though I lived there for over a year in my thirties when I came back to Houston to raise money for my first feature film, "The Trouble with Dick."  My Mom kept the place so clean that the only marks on the carpet are indents from chair and sofa legs.

​The presence of absence.

​Queensloch, Houston

​Queensloch, Houston

20. The Conversation (stairwell, London)

As the photographer I cannot detach from my memory of the moment this photograph was taken.​  For me this image evokes Magritte's painting of a woman's head shrouded in white.  Is that association entirely idiosyncratic?

​​​​The Conversation (London)​​

The Conversation (London)​