Matt Ivester

Matt Ivester in West Hollywood, Calif.

Matt Ivester

Matt Ivester in West Hollywood, Calif.

 

On the last day of 2011 I met up with Matt Ivester for a portrait shoot for the Chronicle of Higher Education in West Hollywood, Calif. Ivester, the founder of the now defunct and controversial JuicyCampus website – on which college students could anonymously post rumors about one another – has just written a book, lol… OMG!: What Every Student Needs to Know About Online Reputation Management, Digital Citizenship and Cyberbullying during his summer off as a graduate business student at Stanford. I didn’t want to get too conceptual with this shoot, so avoiding doing anything that would try to illustrate the idea of ‘cyber reputation.’ I decided instead to just go with a straightforward portrait, playing a little with reflections to illustrate the about face he has made in his stance on the subject, but otherwise just trying to show him as is. As he’s from Palo Alto, we really didn’t have a suitable location to shoot, so decided to meet up at the Pacific Design Center in West Hollywood and wing it. He was easy to work with and we found a few good places to shoot, particularly across the street at the West Hollywood Library, despite not having permission to shoot there. I think it didn’t hurt that it was New Year’s Eve and staffs and security were at a minimum. The top image is what ran, but I like the headshot as well.

Dick Flaharty conscientious objector

WWII conscientious objector Dick Flaharty, 90, at his home in Granada Hills, CA

Dick Flaharty conscientious objector

WWII conscientious objector Dick Flaharty, 90, at his home in Granada Hills, Calif.

In November I shot Dick Flaharty for National Parks Magazine and learned quite a bit about what it was like to be a conscientious objector during the various wars in which America has been involved. Flaharty, of Granada Hills, Calif., served during WWII as a smoke jumper in the National Parks Service. He was one of 12,000 COs who worked with the Civilian Public Service, which put COs to work doing jobs considered to be of national importance here in the U.S. The other 25,000 COs served  non-combat roles in combat zones overseas. Thanks to President Roosevelt, WWII was the first war that the U.S. had been involved in that didn’t persecute conscientious objectors, instead opting to put them to work. According to the National Parks Magazine article, during previous wars, CO’s had been imprisoned, tortured and, during the Civil War, even starved to death.

In order to be accepted as a CO and assigned to a camp, applicants were tested not only on their objection to WWII, but all wars under any circumstances. Only 37,000 of the 72,000 applicants were admitted, according to the article.

Now 90, Flaharty lives alone in a quiet suburban neighborhood 20 miles northwest of Los Angeles. He plays in a bluegrass band with members of his church and has photographs of children and grandchildren lining the hallways and sitting on a bookshelf next to a sofa where he spends much of his time reading. The same spirit that made him what he was back then is still obviously alive though. In his driveway sits a dark blue Prius, adorned with a bumper sticker commenting on fuel consumption. He may be the eldest of the 5 million Prius drivers in the Los Angeles area. And as you approach the front door there is a sign reading “Peace” perched in a window.

He also is part of an organization that keeps the history of the WWII COs alive and keeps track of surviving WWII COs. Despite that, all that remains of his time serving as a smokejumper is a folder containing a couple blurry black and white photographs and some news clippings, as well as a piece of discolored white fabric only a foot wide in either direction and torn on the edges. It is that of a parachute that once nearly killed him, before saving his life. It sounds like a story straight from a comic movie, but actually scary. During a jump to head off a fire, he told me, his chute didn’t open properly, leaving him plummeting toward the earth. I don’t remember if he said that it opened partially, providing some resistance, or whether he was falling at full speed. I think the former. What’s important is that at the end of the fall he found himself crashing through a thick patch of trees, when at the last second, his chute snagged a branch, bringing him to a sudden halt just before impact. He said he could touch the ground with his toes as he dangled there. Crazy! I tried to incorporate the material into the shot, but it just looked like a handkerchief. Oh well.

The article has just been published in the Winter 2011 edition of the magazine. Read it here.

Tired Disney World DadIn my professional career I have photographed riots in Miami, the dangerous slums of Cite Soleil and high-profile subjects like Dr. Dre. None of said situations were as nerve-racking as taking this photo of a musclebound man who looked like a marine using his daughter’s Minnie Mouse sunglasses to keep the light out as he slept on a flight home from Disney World where he’d just spent a week with his wife and young daughter. My reasons for being apprehensive were twofold. First, he looked like a pretty fit guy who could easily kick my ass should he wake up to find some unknown photographer trying to take an embarrassing photo of him in his sleep. Second, I’ve known other photographers to have been detained and questioned after taking photos on an airplane due to security concerns and didn’t feel like winding up in the same situation. These are two pretty convincing reasons to stay in your seat and not take the photo. But I just couldn’t resist! It’s not that I wanted to embarrass the guy, but the obvious juxtaposition and the story the photo could tell was too enticing to pass up. Plus, I was pretty sure I’d seen him reading a bible earlier in the flight and took this as a sign of what I hoped would be his forgiving nature. After getting up and getting my camera out of overhead storage I took a seat and figured out my settings. It was an evening flight and was pretty dark in there, but using a flash was out of the question as it would both wake him up and draw the attention of the flight crew. Thanks to the low-light improvements in recent generations of cameras and a fast lens, I figured I’d still be able to get something usable, so I pushed the ISO up to 5000 and opened up my aperture and hoped for the best. I ended up making several attempts, standing up to pop off a couple frames, sitting back down to examine the photos and repeating. They were turning out, but I just wasn’t satisfied and he was just sitting there, practically taunting me to keep shooting. His wife noticed me on the second attempt and smiled. On the third attempt her smile lessened  as she warned “He’s gonna kill you.” I was hoping she was exaggerating, but took this as my cue to cut it out, returning to my seat for the final time. After he woke up, I waited for a few moments before I got my nerve up to show him the photo. I was relieved to find that he was both a really nice guy and had a good sense of humor! Which is good, since when he later handed me his card I learned that he was a former member of the Army and a mixed martial arts trainer and could probably crush me with his thumb.

Hans Keirstead

Dr. Hans Keirstead at the UC Irvine Reeve-Irvine Research Center

Last week I drove down to the UC Irvine campus to photograph Hans Keirstead for the Chronicle of Higher Education. Keirstead and a research partner at the Reeve-Irvine Research Center are superstars in the field of genetic research. The two, in collaboration with the Geron Corporation, a private drug company, have recently developed a method for using human stem cells to regrow myelin, which forms a protective sheath around the spinal cord, and have used it to restore motor function in paralyzed rats. Now the FDA has approved the first-ever trial on humans, which is to be conducted by Geron. It seems like some pretty exciting research that could eventually yield amazing results for people with debilitating spinal injuries. Adding to the relevance of the story, a judge recently overturned the Obama administration’s attempt to loosen the reigns on federal funding of human stem-cell research. The article talks about the research and the advantages of using private funding for this type of research.

For the shoot I was only asked not to come back with a man standing in a lab wearing a white lab coat. When I got there it was a pretty standard looking laboratory, but upon asking for a quick tour prof. Keirstead showed me a separate room out of the way of the main space, which was somewhat bustling with a number of students and lab assistants. The initial draw was a large microscope situated in the middle of the room, but it was still too standard lab to give me  the unique image I was looking for. I briefly considered lighting the room with colored gels, but that’s not so much my style. I prefer to use minimal lighting and better yet, to utilize whatever natural light sources I find in a given space. So when I saw a large magnifying glass with a beautiful, bright light built into it I was immediately drawn to it. As a fail safe I of course had lugged in my entire lighting kit, but ended up keeping them in the case for this one. Then we spent half an hour finding different angles to shoot using only the light of the magnifying glass. To bring the story into the photo he held up a slide of micro-thin slices of rat spinal cord that was used in the research. In the end we produced a shot that’s both eye-catching and relevant to the story, so I’ll count it as a success. Making it all the better was the subject’s patience and willingness to cooperate, due, in addition to his friendly demeanor, to some good experience in front of the camera. He’s previously sat for the likes of Vogue magazine, which, with 4 hours of shooting and a whole team of stylists and assistants, made my little one-man shoot seem like a walk in the park.

Ramogi Huma for Chronicle of Higher Education

Ramogi Huma, president of the National College Players Association

Last week was a busy week of editorial assignments. Always a good thing! On Tuesday I headed out to Riverside, Calif., to photograph Ramogi Huma for the Chronicle of Higher Education. Huma, a former UCLA Rookie of the Year, is the president of the National College Players Association and is a leading advocate for some major changes to levels of transparency in the NCAA’s recruiting process. His focus lately has been on helping athletes understand their university’s policies when it comes to medical reimbursements for scholarship athletes. Apparently it’s often the case that an injured student will get stuck with all of the medical bills should they suffer an injury. There are two laws pending in California and Georgia, which the NCPA supports, that would force universities to be forthcoming on those issues.

This was a tricky portrait assignment, but I’m pretty happy how it turned out. The task was to do an environmental portrait of Huma in his office. The problem was, he had just moved into his office and didn’t even have a nail with which to hang a picture. So the environment was pretty stark, to say the least. Luckily, he had a couple of statues and a desk available and with a little creative framing and lighting I was able to produce something that worked. I was also fortunate enough to have an easy-going subject and Erinn along to assist. I don’t normally put her to work, but she was off that day and wanted to come along, so it worked out for both of us!

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