Tag Archives: china

Induro Interview: Nelson Chan

Today we are lucky to have a highly interesting interview with Nelson Chan, folks. Chan has been steadily making personal projects that deal with his heritage and relationships. Also he loves Induro! Without further ado….

nelson1

Nelson Chan

I love the way your heritage informs your imagery- with your photographs in China,  your Feng Shui-inspired pictures, and especially your portraits. How has your identity shaped your practice, and do you have difficulty bridging the gap between the two cultures?

Heritage and identity definitely inform the work that I do, and to a certain degree, I can say that they are usually the underlying crux of where my imagery comes from. At first, I never considered these concepts to be a part of my vision; it wasn’t until after college when I started to figure it all out. The past 3 1/2 years were spent traveling between New Jersey, Hong Kong, and China; photographing an ongoing project about my family titled, ‘my Da Lu’. During this time I never felt more mentally alone and it was because of this that a sense of self-recognition occurred with the work that I was making.

nelson-anmy1

from the project ‘my Da Lu’

nelson-anmy2

from the project ‘my Da Lu’

nelson-portrait-china1

from 'portraits in China'

nelson-portrait-china2

from 'portraits in China'

Though there was always a cultural connection with what I was photographing, I wasn’t interested in bridging the gap of my two identities as Chinese/American. It took me a very long time to understand that it’s the ‘gap’ itself, where I exist, which interests me the most. Children of immigrant parents always end up having an identity crisis and it’s this tension that creates a yearning to belong to something. This sense of longing has become what heritage and identity mean in my work. Knowing that I will never be 100% to the right or left of this cross-cultural spectrum has given me a lot of comfort and inspiration. Studying the differences rather than the commonalities seems to be more interesting to me.

Your stark, face-on portraits are really wonderful. They remind me a bit of Richard Renaldi’s work.  I’m especially drawn into the frame when you are shooting someone with whom you’ve had a relationship of some kind. How did you start making portraits, and what do they mean to you?

It’s funny you should say Richard Renaldi. I just had lunch with him and his partner Seth. In regards to the portraits of people who I have relationships with, the environment is always something that is important to me. Like how clothing can inform one’s own personality, their personal space does the same either physically in the picture or emotionally in the expression of the subject’s body or face. They become more comfortable with themselves and in turn, let me be a little more interactive with them. I’ve brought a few people to specific locations, but they are always of places that inform who they are to me.

nelson-portrait1

from 'for the love of...'

nelson-portrait2

from 'for the love of...'

nelson-portrait3

from 'for the love of...'

nelson-portrait4

from 'for the love of...'

I always took portraits because I’m attracted to people, but by nature, I’m an extremely shy photographer. A lot of times, the portraits were very fleeting. It wasn’t until I started shooting with a view camera that I was directly sitting down with my subject for a prolonged period of time. There are a lot of pictures I missed and wish I took; photography has introduced both regret and courage into my life quite well. The only way to combat my shyness is when regret is pounding stronger in my gut. I’ve compared making these portraits to asking someone out on a date. So I guess you can say that the portraits I take is the product of a feeling I decide to confront. I hope that answers your question.

Tell me a bit more about the Feng Shui series. These homes are all in violent areas? How did you find them and shoot them? They’re so stark, and make me want to know their stories…

My series, ‘Wind, Water, and Bullets’ came about from my mother, who is a practitioner of Feng Shui,  and an article I read about a violent neighborhood on Staten Island. In this project, I wanted to talk about issues of violence in our society, but didn’t want to be extremely heavy handed or clichéd with my imagery. All the images were taken with an 8×10 view camera so that the owners of the homes knew what my intentions were. Smaller cameras can seem to feel a little sneaky.

nelson-fs1

from 'wind, water and bullets'

nelson-portrait-fs2

from 'wind, water and bullets'

nelson-portrait-fs3

from 'wind, water and bullets'

I met the owner of the first house I photographed at a friend’s wedding in Iowa. Their home was located in South Central, LA, where I was also staying as a guest. The house is alongside a park that turns into a very dangerous place at night. My first night sleeping there was filled with anxiety, but to feel this was imperative to the project, so I could understand the environment better. A bullet had entered one of the rooms in the upstairs portion of the house in the past. And shortly after I left LA, a nextdoor neighbor whom I had conversed with was shot and killed on the street. He was 24.

Void of artificial light, when looking at these interiors, I decided that I wanted to photograph towards the daylight that was entering through the windows. I want to use the flare of the sunlight to occupy the same space that a potential bullet could pass through. This created a certain dynamic between safety and danger in the photograph on a subconscious level.

What projects are you working on now, and what’s in store for you in the future? Are you able to make a living as a photographer at this point? Do you ever shoot for clients, or do you generally make personal projects?

I am still working on the current projects talked about above, but not shooting any new ones at the moment. I am however still making new pictures that don’t yet belong anywhere. My next move is to make a book dummy of ‘my Da Lu’ and figure it out as a sequence of images. I do not make a living off of being a photographer at this point, but I do make a living in the photography industry. I manage a fine art printing studio in Brooklyn, NY called Ken Allen Studios. I’m a highly skilled and competent craftsman specializing in inkjet printing. Before this, I was freelancing as a digital consultant/technician to artists. This past spring, I along with my friend Gerard Franciosa of My Own Color Lab, I carried out the scanning and digital post-production to photographer, Gina LeVay’s debut monograph from Power House Books,  Sandhogs. Though I’m not opposed to photographing commercially and would welcome it, the most important thing for me is to continue working on personal projects.

nelson-anmy3

from the project ‘my Da Lu’

nelson-portrait-china4

from 'portraits in China'

What has been your experience with Induro tripods? Is there a specific model you’re a fan of, and why?

The camera has become a tool to help position myself in the world. It makes me interact with the environments I am in and gets me thinking about my relationship with what was in front of my lens; whether it is a person or a place. Though my vision is what ultimately makes me an artist, the tools that I use are what carry out that vision. In regards to extensive traveling and shooting with an 8×10 field camera, I appreciate a tripod with three leg sections for set-up speed and weight. With these specific guidelines, the CT313 has been a great performer for me. It’s extremely stable and I can easily extend the bottom sections and raise the center column to quickly have the camera be at the perfect height. If I need to have a higher vantage point, I can easily extend the second leg sections. The foam grips are also much welcomed because it really helps to ease the handling of my 8×10. With shooting a view camera, the legs it sits on is just as important as the lens or any other component and the CT313 is it.

-

Thanks, Nelson!

Into the Wilderness with Jon Ortner

bio-photo

Can you believe it, folks- we’ve got another great interview today. This one is with Jon Ortner, who has created a tremendous career for himself as a travel photographer. Jon told me how he balances his commercial and personal work, and what spots on earth are most photogenic. It’s not to be missed, have a read!

How did you first begin to combine travel and photography, and where were your first trips? Which are the places you continue to return to?

Right out of High School I first traveled to India, Kashmir and Nepal. I went on my first trek into the Himalaya and that journey changed the direction of my life and sparked the beginning of my photographic career. For more than 20 years I continued to travel and photograph in the Himalaya. I worked mostly in Nepal, but also worked in Bhutan, Ladakh and Tibet. Some of the trips were longer than four months, and I went on treks into the mountains that extended over 50 days, walking more than 500 miles.

ortner-nepal1

Nepal

ortner-nepal3

As I became more interested in the spiritual traditions of Hinduism and Buddhism and the art and architecture they inspired, I widened my photographic interests to include Southeast Asia. I went on repeated shoots in Thailand, Cambodia, Myanmar, Laos, Bali, Java, India, and China, and continued to express my photographic passion. I created several books related to those areas, which can be viewed in the publications section of my website.

I  still have plans to continue working in Asia, but more recently, especially over the past five or six years, I have been concentrating on the canyons and deserts of the American Southwest.  Shooting with a Fuji 6×17cm Panorama film camera, I have just come out with my new book Canyon Wilderness of the Southwest. It has been reviewed by National Geographic, and just won the Gold Award for Book of The Year by Foreword Magazine.

canyons

How do you choose your gear- how have your choices changed since the rise of digital?

Since all of my books have been about outdoor destinations, I still hike very long distances and  carry huge amounts of equipment to create my images. Film Cameras, Digital Nikons and accessories, plus food, water, maps, first aid kit and everything else you might need to travel and shoot in the wilderness. The recent desert shoots have been especially demanding because of the amount of water you need to carry (and it’s concurrent weight) and the long distances that must be hiked in intense heat.

What features are most important to you in a tripod? (do you have particular needs for something great for long exposures, or that can flip upside down for macro shots)- which Induro tripod do you like most?

Of course, a sturdy tripod ends up being one of the most important items to have along.  As soon as I got to see and handle the Induro Carbon Fiber models, I was sold. Extra stable and light, the two magic words.  I have shot all over the world and know how rugged the Induro actually is. Unlike other models that have failed on me in the most inconvenient places, the Induro has served me faithfully in the worst sand storms, submerged in deep muddy water and frozen with ice and snow.

ortner-china

They are almost impervious to sand and water, but the real beauty of Induro, is that if you have to, they can be disassembled, cleaned, and put back together quickly and easily. I use the Induro especially for long twilight exposures, and the legs allow you to also shoot low to the ground for macro as well. I am currently favoring the small light C214 for hiking, and the C413 for closer to home and studio jobs.

What projects are you currently working on? How do you continue to balance commercial and personal projects?

Canyon Wilderness was such a large project, not only in terms of the time and effort it took to shoot,  but also in terms of the extraordinary care and effort that was put into the layout, printing, and design. It was all done with color, so I have been in the mood to do something visually different.

For many years I have also been shooting in Black & White, in both medium and large formats. I have been very excited, and have created some some of the most unusual and fulfilling images of my career. I will eventually produce a book on American Wilderness.

ortner-city

Balancing commercial and personal work has always been a challenge. Money means freedom, so the bigger and better the commercial jobs, the more freedom I have to shoot in expensive places like Bhutan. Every time I am stuck doing a mundane, commercial, real estate job, I just close my eyes for a moment and I am back in Bali, Kauai, or in some awesome slot canyon in Utah.

ortner-ad

Having said that, many of my commercial jobs have also brought me to great locations, with creative and enjoyable shooting. So I am one of the lucky ones– to have it both ways. Because I love what I do, I shoot with the same passion whether it is for a client or for myself.

Which location that you’ve traveled lends itself best to photography (if it’s possible to choose)….

Hard to choose one, so here’s a few of my all time favorites:

ortner_hawaii

The Island of Kauai in Hawaii

ortner_myanmar

Shwedagon Pagoda, Yangon, Myanmar

ortner-bhutan1

Trekking anywhere in Bhutan

<all images copyright Jon Ortner>

Thanks, Jon! I want to go on a trek myself now…