Category Archives: Art

Go over the rainbow with Alliance’s folk art take on “Oz”

When it comes to Americana, even a tornado would have a hard time uncovering a story as ingrained in American pop culture as The Wizard of Oz. Though this tale has been told in multiple ways since the 1900 publication of the L. Frank Baum-penned The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, it’s the 1939 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film starring Judy Garland that has taught most of us that it’s fun to follow the proverbial yellow brick road, but there is ultimately no place like home. Through March 11, the Alliance Theatre will be taking theatergoers over the rainbow in a production that is loyal to the film while also putting its own folk art twist on the tale. From the patchwork pattern that covers the stage floor to the Altoids-tin abdomen of the Tin Woodsman, this version definitely borrows heavily from its surroundings while paying homage to what has become one of Hollywood’s most memorable films. Director Rosemary Newcott (the Alliance’s Sally G. Tomlinson Artistic Director of Theatre for Youth) takes a moment to talk to Wrestling with Pop Culture about the folk art influences of the play and more.

Your interpretation of The Wizard of Oz is very loyal to the 1939 movie, but it also puts a folk art visual spin on things. That actually seems like a natural fit, but why did you choose to incorporate folk art into the production? Were there any challenges in doing that?

I’m married to a folk artist, so it’s all over my house and I look at it all the time. When you’re looking to design a show you’re always looking at what possible ways you can go, especially when you’re taking an iconic movie like that. You can’t put the film on the stage. So between looking at my husband’s art and basically playing off the Tin Man, who is a piece of folk art as he originally existed – and even if you look at Baum’s drawings there’s some kind of folk art sensibility to his original illustrations – that connection was what inspired this show.

He was about Americana and sought to create this American fairy tale when he wrote The Wizard of Oz. One of my earliest memories is seeing that MGM movie with my family. Talk about pop culture, that film’s images and lines and characters are so integrated into who we all are, certainly on a national level but even internationally, that particular movie and story has just been so constant. In the long run, it’s about how a family and how relationships work, where you find your home and what’s important to you. From that perspective, it’s very connected to the way that a folk artist uses the elements around his or her home to create. When we looked at that, which is just taking out of the earth and creating from wherever you live, it seemed to be such a perfect connection to what that story is.

The Wrestling with Pop culture logo by KRK Ryden has a yellow brick road-like path leading into a giant luchador’s mouth. So I definitely understand how much this story is part of pop culture.

I get it! And it’s so funny, I directed a show in La Jolla, California called Frida Libre. It’s supposed to be Frida Kahlo as a young girl and this other character is aspiring to be one of those Mexican wrestlers. So we played around with that imagery a lot. Of course, out there every other child was Mexican so they really loved it.

You mentioned that your husband is a folk artist. What’s his name?

His name is Tom Marquardt, but he’s got an art name which is TMarq.

You mean like a wrestling gimmick?

Yes! It’s his other persona. He used to do a lot of folk art festivals, but he’s not doing so much of that anymore because the market’s so bad. We did get up to Paradise Garden and got to meet Howard Finster. His persona actually greatly inspired Brandon O’Dell’s Wizard. He watched a lot of videos of Finster and rather than going for the guy in the movie, we just went for more of a Finster-looking gentleman, which is where the costume designer went.

There are some obvious differences between the cast of the movie and the cast of your play. Was that done intentionally to stay with the folk art theme or was it just a matter of who had the best audition?

My mind is always somewhat partial to multicultural casting because I feel like probably 80 percent of my school audiences are African American. We all want to see ourselves up there, but because folk art reflects home, I felt like that needed to be there because that diversity is so reflected in our culture. I would have been even more diverse if I could. There are certain conditions of singing, dancing and acting that you need to have in there, too. But I’m grateful for the amount of talent this city is providing, especially with a lot of actors who are also talented musically. The amount of young people who are triple threats is growing, which is outstanding.

The entire cast is very good, but Brad Raymond as the Cowardly Lion stands out quite a bit.

He’s quite wonderful, and he’s not Bert Lahr. When I first got into that audition process, almost everyone was coming in and trying to do Bert Lahr imitations. You can’t do that! So it was great when Brad came in with something that was uniquely his own twist on it, even though it sort of honors Bert Lahr in some respects.

There are certain parts of the movie that you obviously can’t recreate in this setting, such as when the Wicked Witch of the West catches the Scarecrow on fire, or the Witch having an entire army of green guys. But you captured the feel of the movie without having little people in the cast. Did you have the idea to have puppets and other tricks from the beginning?

It was abosolutely part of the plan, but very tricky. I’m grateful to have Reay Kaplan and Patrick McColery, who have both puppeteered extensively. And Michael Haverty, who did this amazing piece based on Alice in Wonderland that was about his mother at 7 Stages last year, helped us with conceptualizing the puppets. We started brainstorming for this a little less than a year ago. We’d just gather at my house, look at folk art and talk about how to invent this in a way that honors the movie and can still represent that populous. Munchkinland was the trickiest one because it’s a whole culture of little people. If I could cast children, I would. But I can’t, so this was the only way to go. The invention happens because of your limitations, so it reminds me of folk art in that we were taking what little we had and creating from it. The resources at the Alliance obviously helped, too. I’m grateful for the artists and they take such pride in it. It really took a while to evolve Toto because he is handled so much in the show, but I love what they came up with.

The show wraps up this weekend. What do you have planned after that?

We’re taking it on tour to LaGrange and that will be fun for the kids and families out there. It’s at a school that can accommodate some of our scenic elements, but we can’t bring all of them. Hopefully it will be something we can pack up and revive. It’s so connected to everybody I hope it’s something we can bring back.

Right now I’m developing a new piece for our Theatre for the Very Young component, which serves 18-month-old to 5-year-old children. It will play in the Black Box Theatre on the third floor of the Alliance. It’s amazing for me because how do you entertain 18-month-old kids? It’s very installation based and very hands on. They wander right into the space and they’re part of the show. I’m partnering with Lauri Stallings from gloATL for The Tranquil Tortoise and the Hoppity Hare. It’s kind of a dance piece created specifically for younger kids.

Right after that I’m off to The Kennedy Center to remount a production called Knuffle Bunny by Mo Willems, which is a piece about a baby and her Knuffle Bunny. Then who knows what’s next? There’s always something cooking up.

For more information, go to www.alliancetheatre.org.

Eric Pigors opens “Deaths Casket” and creates Monsterpieces in time for Halloween

By Jonathan Williams

For monster artist Eric Pigors, every day is Halloween. Well, at least it should be considering the macabre and maniacal masks, T-shirts, prints and books that come from his Toxictoons collection. While he has worked on such family-friendly Disney hits as The Lion King and The Princess and the Frog, cartoonishly delightful looks at death and dismemberment have always been his forte. But when he suffered a heart attack just before the release of his latest book, Deaths Casket: Art of Unkle Pigors, Pigors realized that he may have been channeling some subconscious concerns about his own health in some of his latest works.

“For the last year I’ve kind of had a weird feeling like, ‘Ugh. I don’t feel like I’m going to be around much longer,'” says Pigors. “A lot of the book is death-themed with cemeteries, mortuaries and stuff like that. So maybe subconsciously it was seeping out of me. I don’t know, maybe I’m just reading too much into what I’m drawing. If I took my book to my shrink I’m sure she’d have a field day.”

Including new material as well as work he has done for Netherworld Haunted House and bands such as the 69 Eyes, the Laughing Dead, Psycho Charger, the Ghastly Ones and Bill Moseley‘s Spider Mountain, the new book is exactly what fans of Pigors’ Toxictoons have come to love.

“It’s pretty much like the art I’ve been doing since the last book came out,” he admits. “It’s 100 pages of new art, but a lot of it’s similar to that book. It has band art in it, stuff I did for Netherworld, Halloween and all the other stuff I usually draw like Frankenstein, vampires, skulls and stuff like that.”

Another new creation for Pigors is the Monsterpieces iPhone app he created with fellow Disney animator Eric Daniels, which features Pigors’ artwork as well as music by Los Straitjackets.

“I worked with his wife Margie Daniels on The Princess and Frog and a hand-drawn 3D featurette for the DVD release of Kung Fu Panda 2,” says Pigors. “He wanted to do an app with an artist and liked what I was doing.”

Though he is recovering well from his ailment, he has still had to lay low this Halloween season, skipping his annual trip to Netherworld and other seasonal festivities. But he says he is still going to decorate his mom’s garage for trick-or-treaters, another of his Halloween traditions. You can also find Pigors and his Toxictoons creations at the Bats Day Holiday Black Market in Anaheim, Calif. on Nov. 6.

For more information, go to www.toxictoons.com.

 

 

 

Sopo Art Bike Show gets in gear with “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure”

By Jonathan Williams

Taking place at restaurants, coffee shops and other venues around Atlanta throughout the month of September, the Sopo Art Bike Show features works by local names such as stencil artist Evereman, body painter Stephanie Anderson of Neon Armour, metal sculptor Charlie Smith of the Art of Such n Such and photographer Linda Costa. Using bike frames as an unconventional canvas, the art auction serves the dual purpose of promoting bicycling in Atlanta through these rideable pieces of art and raising money for the Sopo Bike Co-op.

"Zombie Bicycle Frame" by Stephanie Howard

As part of the show, the Plaza Theatre hosts its latest Art Opening and a Movie tonight with a screening of Tim Burton‘s directorial debut, Pee-wee’s Big Adventure. Before the demented man child (“I know you are, but what am I?”) known as Pee-wee Herman begins his quest for his red bike on the big screen, the  “Zombie Bicycle Frame” created by Stephanie Howard will be on display in the lobby, as well as other bicycle-inspired art by Deb Davis and Stacy Kline.

Artwork by Deb Davis

The artwork will be available for bids all month, with a final reception at the Goat Farm on Oct. 7, which will feature additional bike frames and other artwork, as well as music from DJ Chris Devoe and other festivities. There will be other Sopo Art Bike events at other participating venues later this month, but your only chance to catch Pee-wee’s adventures on his beloved bike are at the Plaza this week.

Art Opening and a Movie. $6.50-$9. Art opening at 8 p.m., movie screening at 9:30 p.m. (Encore screening at 3 p.m. Sept. 10). Plaza Theatre, 1049 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 404-873-1939, www.artbikes.sopobikes.org, www.plazaatlanta.com.

“The Crow” creator James O’Barr spreads his wings in new ways

Best known for creating The Crow, the 1989 comic series on which numerous movies, comic books, toys and a TV show have been based, it’s been a few years since we’ve heard a squawk from James O’Barr or his most famous creation. But that doesn’t mean he hasn’t been busy working on new material. Though he’s not officially part of this year’s Dragon*Con, O’Barr will be appearing at two New Evolutionary Movement/Neon Armour art events and an in-store at Criminal Records in Atlanta this weekend. As he prepares for the torturous task of using naked women as a canvas, he talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about these events and other upcoming projects.

What can you tell me about body painting event you’re doing on Saturday night? Have you done much painting on human flesh?

I’ve never actually done painting on the model before. I’ve never painted a woman with anything you couldn’t lick off afterwards. But I like a challenge, and I like this challenge of making everybody in the room look bad. It’s an artistic will to provoke type thing. When you get a bunch of artists together, we always try to show each other up, so everybody brings their A game.

The talent involved with this show is pretty impressive. Have you ever worked with any of these guys before?

I’ve known David Mack for 15 years now and I’m friend with Bill Sienkiewicz, too. But he’s always on the opposite coast as me, so I don’t know him as well as David.

You’re best known for creating The Crow. It’s been a while since there have been any new Crow comics or movies. What have you been working on more recently? Any chance there will ever ben new Crow stories from the character’s creator?

My Crow book was self contained. It had a definite ending and I really didn’t have anything else to add to it. People wanted more Crow comics, so I let other people kind of play in that universe. But I really had nothing else to add to it.

I took some time off to be self indulgent and learn how to paint. I’ve done a lot of book covers and album covers and things like that. Just in the past few years I’ve gotten back into comics. I miss telling a story.

What can you tell me about the comics you’ve been working on?

I have five books in the works right now, but none of them have come out. I just finished an Author’s Edition of The Crow that’s got 35 pages of new stuff in it. So it’s finally the way I wanted it. There are things I wasn’t capable of doing 20 years ago. I didn’t change the story, I didn’t do the George Lucas thing and just go in and shine a bunch of things up. I actually added more layers to it so this version of the story has a little more depth, I think.

What are the other books you’re working on and when will they be coming out?

I have a 1940s film noir book I’m working. But my big project right now is this gothic Western thing I’ve been working on called Sundown. It’s kind of been my pet project for ten years now. It’s fully painted in these widescreen anamorphic panels. It’s not like a typical comic that has six square panels and a rectangle on a page. The whole thing is done in widescreen shots and everything is by hand, so it’s taken a while. It’s a 300 page book with a pretty complex storyline.

While you’re in Atlanta, you’re also doing a more intimate figure drawing event on Friday at the DooGallery. How will that differ from the body painting event?

We’re not drawing on the models at that event, but we’re going to have a bunch of girls come in and model for us. So one night I’m going to be drawing naked women and the next night I’m going to be drawing on naked women, which is kind of a win-win situation for me. I don’t know if I’ll be able to pull off that tortured artists affectation this weekend.

Yeah, that will be tough. I don’t know if you follow pro wrestling, but I’m sure you’re familiar with Sting. Though he is now doing more of a Heath Ledger-like Joker gimmick, he has become known for his Crow-inspired look. What are your thoughts on your influence on his look and persona?

Assembly of Dust

I’ve met him and he’s a pretty nice guy, but I’ve never actually seen any of his events. When people first started saying, “He looks like Sting,” I kept thinking, “Sting from the Police?” I was pretty unaware it at first, but I just consider it flattery. Everyone knows where it came from. I just kind of look on it with amusement because it doesn’t affect me in any way.

He actually lives about an hour from me and he wanted me to do some artwork for him. I don’t think he quite understood that I would be doing a parody of myself, or giving him validation, if I did that. I was really uncomfortable with it, so it didn’t happen. But, best of luck to him.

I think Heath Ledger owes me some royalties, too. But he was the best thing in that movie. Anytime they went off the Joker, I just wanted them to go back. I couldn’t have cared less about Two-Face. But it’s the same thing. I think people know where the inspiration came from.

Figure Drawing with David Mack, Bill Sienkiewicz, James O’Barr, Peter Steigerwald and Joe Benitez. $20. 7 p.m. Sept. 2. DooGallery, 205 Holtzclaw St., Unit J, Atlanta, Ga. www.doogallery.com.

In-store appearance. Free. 12 p.m.-6 p.m. Sept. 3. Criminal Records, 1154-A Euclid Ave. NE, Atlanta, Ga. 404-215-9511, www.criminalatl.com.

Legends of the Underground Body Art Show. $10. 10 p.m. Sept. 3. The New American Shakespeare Tavern, 499 Peachtree St. NE, Atlanta, Ga. 404-874-5299, www.shakespearetavern.com.

“The History of Wrestling” puts ring icons on art canvas

By Jonathan Williams

From album covers to political propaganda, it is not uncommon for artists to utilize other creative fields to establish themselves and gain a following. While music, film and other pop culture arenas lend themselves to artistic interpretation, it’s not often that a painter turns to professional wrestling for inspiration. But in the case of the St. Louis-based artist known simply as the Icon, wrestling is the basis of his most successful painting, “The Gods of Thunder: The History of Wrestling.” After releasing the painting in May of last year, it has since been published in the January issue of WWE Magazine, featured in the WrestleMania Art show last March and shown at fanfests and other wrestling events. The Icon has had more than 200 of the 355 wrestling personalities depicted in the painting sign a framed poster reproduction, so the wrestling community is definitely aware of his work. Wrestling with Pop Culture spoke to the Icon recently about how pop culture has influenced his artistic output.

You’ve gotten a lot of attention recently for “The History of Wrestling” painting. The inspiration for it is pretty obvious, but how did the concept come about?

A friend of mine wanted an artist to paint wrestlers. He said he asked 15 artists to paint a picture of wrestlers for him and nobody wanted to do it because they felt like no one had an interest in wrestling like they used to. I used to be a fan back in the day and he had seen my other work, such as a painting I did called “The Last Man on Earth.” It’s got a guy standing naked on Earth and the Devil’s trying to take him from God and there’s a hand coming out of the sky with rays releasing the chains and the serpent with seven heads. That’s the inspiration for [Vince] McMahon.

[My friend] wanted a painting of his 30 favorite wrestlers, but I told him we needed babyfaces and heels. I said, “Painting 30 wrestlers isn’t enough. Let’s do 100.” This went on and on for three years until we reached 355 wrestlers. I painted a lot of this in detail with a magnifying glass and a brush that looks like an eyelash. Then WWE got ahold of it and published it, then invited me to the WrestleMania Art show. Then this thing just took off all over the world. It’s seen 53 countries, so it’s my most successful piece at the moment.

Tell me a little about your background as an artist and some of your other work.

My inspiration was a guy named Salvador Dali. An ex-girlfriend of mine seen my work and knew I had something, so she gave me this book called Dali on Dali. I said, “This book is weird.” I didn’t know I was a surrealist until I read that book. I painted a lot of dark things and shock value statements, and I like the old Universal [Monsters] like Lon Chaney and Boris Karloff, so I started drawing those monsters. So I did them in a fantasy style like Dali, and this is all like Dali all over again. I love painting surreal fantasy. Fantasy pictures are an escape from reality, and wouldn’t you rather be in a fantasy than in reality? Fantasy expands your mind and if you look at “The History of Wrestling,” you’ll learn something new every day.

I paint what I feel. That’s what makes an artist and artist. You can’t tell an artist he should do this or he should do that because that’s not real, that’s not original. He’s got to let his heart be his guide. I’ve learned from a lot of my painting in the early days and being alone and I’ve painted a lot of dark things. I’m more positive these days, but I love Creepshow and The Devil’s Rejects.

From depictions of Michael Jackson to Muhammad Ali lot of your stuff is obviously pop culture related. Why do you choose those subjects?

It’s like a new version of Andy Warhol. I’m not so much a commercial artist, I’m more of a non-mainstream artist. But I do paint things that are mainstream in order to make sales. There’s a certain fanbase for certain pictures, but this is what I love doing. Anybody can paint a dog or a landscape, but I don’t want to be that artist. What made me the artist that I am is that I wanted to be the artist I had never seen. I don’t want to be like anybody else because that’s what everybody does today in the art world. Everybody’s chasing the same nickel and there are so many great artists out there doing the same work that it’s like winning a lottery ticket.

My signature is dark pictures. I love landscapes, and I’m a photographer as well, but I’m probably one of the last of a dying breed who still hand paints. It’s not real artwork when people Photoshop and draw from a palette on a computer screen. I hand painted every one of these 355 guys. It’s easy for someone to do that on a computer, but they’re not artists. Sure, you can be inspired by another artist, but do your own thing. I’m a visionary when it comes to certain ideas and if you can get a customer or fan to figure out your thoughts without even giving them a title, then they know your soul.

There was an old Jewish Italian artist named Modigliani who used to paint portraits. He wasn’t a great artist, but he had a thing with women with long necks. But he would never paint their eyes, so they looked like a Cenobite from Hellraiser. He would say, “When I know your soul, I will paint your eyes.” He has a lot of pictures that don’t have eyes in them. That’s deep.

Aside from wrestling fanfests, do you ever have art shows in galleries?

Yes. I have work in galleries in St. Louis, New York, Chicago and the One Sun Gallery in New Orleans.

Back in the day I used to do public education in schools and colleges, and I used to paint on walls with a company called On the Wall Productions back in the ’80s. We would paint likenesses on the walls of buildings that were about to be torn down, so a lot of those paintings got torn down. I used to be a big wall painter, but now I do more personal pieces. I put my life into [“The History of Wrestling”] and you can see the blood, sweat and tears. If you took that picture from me right now, it would be like losing a son or losing a kidney. It’s a big part of me. One time I was really upset and I mixed my blood with some crimson red paint and painted with it. That picture will never see the light of day. People say, “Man, I’d like to see that picture,” but that picture is too painful. I paint a lot from pain.

Frida was a great artist and a lot of her pictures are painful. She was not a surrealist, but it looked like a surreal picture. She was very deep with her emotions. That’s what artists do. They come from their gut and spit it out. If you can make people undertsand that, you done made everybody’s day. I’ve got big fans from this picture alone and when they see my other work they say, “Wow. That’s pretty deep.”

But this picture is priceless, you can’t even put a price on it. It’s a timeless piece that will never get old because it’s made forever. This is a lifetime of wrestlers and the second one will be a continuation.

So you’re working on another wrestling painting?

Yes. The second one will be a continuatoin, but different. I’ll focus more on Georgia, the Carolinas, Florida and the women of wrestling starting with the Fabulous Moolah and Mae Young. I’ll have more tag teams like the Kangaroos, the Moondogs, nWo, D-Generation X, the Blue Meanie and little cliques like that. Where McMahon is in this picture, I’m going to have the greatest match in the world which will probably Andre the Giant getting slammed by Hulk Hogan. So Hulk will be on there twice, but that man opened the door for every wrestler today that’s in show business.

I could have just painted wrestlers, but putting McMahon on there like that as the Devil, it went together. When people see that picture, they realize that’s McMahon.

Have you ever gotten feedback directly from McMahon about it?

I know he’s seen it and his Board of Directors knows about it. But it’s not a WWE product. It’s a history of wrestling. It’s not about politics. Everybody’s a star in that picture. It’s a rich history and these guys deserve the exposure just like baseball, NASCAR or whatever. People need to know about wrestling and a person who is not a wrestling fan would still love this picture.

How does this piece compare to your other work?

The portraits, jazz art, rock stars, personalities, nude photography and things people can identify with is Icon.

I’m not much of an abstract painter because I think it’s garbage. But I have done abstracts that you can identify with. D’vid Davidian the name I use for landscapes, abstracts and regular stuff that sells. I don’t take my D’vid stuff to wrestling shows, but when I do comic cons and regular art shows I’ll go to galleries and set up my show with maybe ten pieces of my mainstream and shock value art. But I don’t take the wrestling piece to a place where I know people aren’t going to be into it like the wrestling fans are. Not many artists are wrestling fans, but this has to be seen and every wrestling fan should have this poster. There’s nothing like this picture, ever. Somebody can try to outdo me, but Photoshop ain’t going to do no good. That’s not real art. But I would love to see somebody outdo it because the only person that can outdo it is me. And I’ll do that with the second one.

When will that be finished?

“The History of Wrestling 2” won’t be done until late summer 2012. In the meantime, I’m doing my Fantasy Warfare series in between paintings. What I’m thinking about is the days when computers became famous and people used to do these fantasy matches with Muhammad Ali and Bruce Lee. I had this concept that’s not a WWE concept, though I heard they did this one, where a guy from the past wrestles a guy of today. But I want them to complement each other based on who would be good opponents for each other. Like, let’s have “The Celtic Warrior” Sheamus vs. the Ultimate Warrior. That’s the first of series one, which will have six different prints. The second one will have Goldberg and Batista or Edge spearing each other midair. Then [Jimmy] Snuka vs. [John] Morrison, Andre the Giant vs. the Big Show and Harley Race piledriving Kurt Angle. These are not too exaggerated like those computer games. I want them to look the way they look [in real life]. I’m thinking about trading cards with pictures like that. The only thing different about it is the artists, because this has probably been done before. But these will by the guy who painted “The History of Wrestling” picture. People know me because of that picture and I’m proud of it.

For more information, go to www.iconsofwrestling.com.

Chip Simone’s images resonate at the High in “Resonant Images”

By Jonathan Williams

After studying under renowned photographer Harry Callahan at the Rhode Island School of Design in the ’60s, Chip Simone developed his own unique style of black-and-white street photography over the course of the next few decades. A longtime Atlanta resident, Simone made the switch to color images in 2000, after also embracing digital photography technology. Over the next decade, Simone explored the streets of Atlanta (as well as his home state of Massachusetts and elsewhere), capturing people (ranging from ordinary to eccentric) and moments (ranging from mundane to surreal) that might otherwise have been overlooked. This Saturday, The Resonant Image: Photographs by Chip Simone opens at the High Museum of Art with a gallery talk by Simone at 2 p.m. At a recent preview (attended by the late Callahan’s wife and muse Eleanor), Simone took a moment to talk about some of the more pop culture-inspired images in the show.  

"Hummingbird Corset, Atlanta, 2010" by Chip Simone

Most of your images look like they are random glimpses at things most of us might not normally stop to look at, while others are clearly at pop culture events such as Dragon*Con. Do you seek out these moments to capture or do you take your camera everywhere you go and just happen upon things?

"Silver Man, Atlanta, 2010" by Chip Simone

Both. I don’t usually gravitate to events because most people at places like that go to be looked at. But I had never gone to Dragon*Con before and I found a delightful humor and spirit. When I looked at these people, they sort of look past a certain ordinariness and into something that transformed them. The guy in the “Silver Man,” he was totally that.

"Girl with Camera, Atlanta, 2009" by Chip Simone

And the “Girl with Camera,” that was eccentric. It was cobbled together from different ideas; she was sexy and cute and spanned a couple of different eras. This isn’t stuff that I think about at the time. Most of these pictures are done in a matter of seconds and I move on. But I can pick up things very quickly. That’s one of my good fortunes is that I can see things in people because I’ve studied drawing and taught drawing for years. I think the the best training to work with spontaneity is to have a skill set that allows you to see the essentials of any scene. And drawing forces you to do that because you have a blank slate.

 

 

What concert were you attending at the Tabernacle when you took “Red Post, Tabernacle, 2001”?

It was a bar mitzvah for my friend’s son. His son is currently hiking the Appalachian Trail. He’s several hundred miles into it and just a few days ago proposed to his girlfriend. They’re hiking all the way up to Mount Katahdin in Maine.

"Red Post Tabernacle, Atlanta, 2001" by Chip Simone

You were a black-and-white street photographer up until 2000, which is where this show begins. Why did you switch from black-and-white to color photography? Did that coincide with your switching from film to digital cameras?

I had worked with color film for a while. Then I got a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1980 or something like that. I had been shooting 8 x 10 negatives for ten years up to that point. Then I got this money from the government, which encouraged me to try something new. So I got a shitload of Kodachrome because working with a big camera, you have so much control and there are so many variables, but with Kodachrome there’s no control. It’s either right or wrong. So I thought I would work under a different set of restrictions and I liked it. Kodachrome has a very narrow dynamic range, but I couldn’t print it. I couldn’t make good prints and just had problems. In the back of my mind, I remembered having had a good experience with color. But it wasn’t until the advent of digital camera technology that all the research was pointed toward increased dynamic range and stability. So I started making pictures with digital cameras, but a lot of them I didn’t print for eight years because the paper and the printers weren’t ready yet. So I was patient.

What was the most valuable thing you learned from studying under Callahan?

I studied with him in the ’60s, then I got to know him again becausae he moved to Atlanta and died here in ’99. So I had another bunch of years with him. But when I first met him I was 19 and one of Callahan’s rites of passage was that he would invite you to his house on a Friday night, where he would have people over and they’d all get shitfaced. So he told me he was having some people over and that he’d like me to come. When I got there, I wasn’t exactly comfortable in that setting because I didn’t know the protocols of all that stuff. Eleanor could sense that, so she was sitting next to me on the sofa and was telling me what I was seeing – who they were, what they were known for – and we’ve remained very good friends ever since then.  

The Resonant Image: Photographs by Chip Simone. $11-$18. June 18-Nov. 6. High Museum of Art, 1280 Peachtree St. NE, Atlanta, Ga. 404-733-4400, www.high.org.