Tuesday, June 16, 2009

CHILDREN'S TRUST




THE CHILDREN'S TRUST, MIAMI HEART GALLERY held it's opening at the Freedom Tower in Miami on Friday, June 12th. I had two images displayed in the gallery, one of two sisters Georgianna and Georgie, I shot at Fair Child's Gardens. This was a group effort by mostly South Florida photographers, stylist and the Trust. I was honored to participate along with fellow photographers Carl Juste, Jeffrey Salter and Al Diaz.

MIAMI, FL – June 12, 2009 – For the second consecutive year, The Children’s Trust is spearheading an initiative promoting the adoption of foster children in Miami-Dade County called the The Children’s Trust Miami Heart Gallery. This groundbreaking work in Miami-Dade County seeks adoptive parents for 58 children, and the museum-quality exhibit features portraits of those available for adoption, photographed by some of the world’s top photographers. Based on a national model of other Heart Galleries in cities across the United States, the Miami Heart Gallery captures the unique personality of the children through portraits taken at Vizcaya Museum & Gardens, Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden and Amelia Earhart Park. The photographs will be on exhibit to the public from Saturday, June 13 through Sunday, July 12 at The Freedom Tower, located at 600 N. Biscayne Blvd., Miami, FL 33132. The exhibition will be open Tuesdays thru Fridays, 12 p.m. – 5 p.m. and on Saturdays, 11 a.m. – 4 p.m. and will subsequently travel to different venues throughout Miami-Dade County.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

SPJ AWARD



Miami Herald reporter Casey Woods and I traveled to Bimini to find human smugglers for a story, a task we thought would be difficult. An island swamped with pirates and smugglers in the 70’s and 80’s, we thought it would be a distant history. Well, one thing we didn’t count on, most smugglers from the last century still lived on the small island. And still dabbled in the trade.

It was part of a larger project for the Miami Herald on immigration. The SPJ awarded two of my fellow photographers and me second place in FEATURE PHOTOGRAPHY SERIES.

Society of Professional Journalists The Miami Herald; Carl Juste, Charles Trainor, Jr. & John Van Beekum; Illegal Immigration: Changing Course
Comments: A sweeping and powerful story on illegal immigration. The entry shows a consistently high level of photography throughout the entire story

Miami Herald photographer Patrick Farrell also won in first place BREAKING NEWS PHOTOGRAPHY The Miami Herald; Patrick Farrell; A People in Despair: Haiti’s Hurricane SeasonComments: Comments: Patrick’s picture is beautiful and compelling. He captured a tragic moment during a horrific time that truly spoke to the struggle of the Haitian people. This man, embracing his lifeless daughter, is an emotionally engaging picture that was sure to stop readers’ in their tracks

Image above: Rudolph Lambert Kemp, an admitted smuggler and pirate, stands next to ship wreckaged off the west coast of Bimini.

PROUD PULITZER


On Thursday, May 28th, my dear friend Patrick Farrell was honored with a Pulitzer Prize from Columbia University. He won in the Breaking News category for his coverage in Haiti, A People in Despair: Haiti’s Hurricane Season www.pulitzer.org/works/2009-Breaking-News-Photography. Since he won the constant remark I hear is, “it couldn’t of happen to a nicer guy”, and may I add, ‘or a better friend.” We are all proud of you Patrick! Images above are from his winning entry.

MEMORIAL DAY





A late Memorial Day post but a worthy one. Costello, my godson, and I shopped for the soldiers at war today. For the last two years we have shipped supplies to the soldiers through www.anysoldier.com. We have made a commitment to send a selection of the supplies they requested on the site several times a year. You can actually pick a soldier from any state and view his unit’s list.

After traveling the state in 2007 photographing the parents of soldiers who lost their children in the war, I was moved to do what I could to help and support the soldiers. It taught me that until you sit in the living room of a family that lost their child in the war, you would never truly understand its consequences.

Images above: Costello and his sister Carmela with the supplies. And Harry and his family, they buried their son in their backyard near Tallahassee. A request he gave his father before leaving for Iraq.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

ELIANA AND JONAH


BELLA FAMIGLIA PHOTOGRAPHY: Eliana Salzhauer with her son Joshua on the swing and pregnant with Jonah. Jonah was born on August 27th and weighed 8lbs 4ozs at birth. Eliana is a producer with CBS and is back to work.

ART BASEL 2008







My maternity portraits are the latest projects I have passionately pursued with my camera. (www.bellafamigliaphotography.com) I was inspired to be a photographer by the images my father shot in his years as Director of Photography at The Miami Daily News. One of his young protégés, Michael O’Brien, was drawn with a mission to photograph the underprivileged living in Miami’s poorest neighborhoods, resulting in numerous awards and interest. This lead to my project called “THE CORRIDOR.” I documented the neighborhoods between I-95 and the railroad tracks to the east from Deerfield Beach to Overtown. I return every nine years to re-photograph five of the subjects and show how their lives have changed. (www.charlestrainorjr.com) And it has always been for the better. (Images above: Ralph at age 6, with his new home at 15 and at FAMU at 24)

After 18 years into the project I felt it was complete enough to try and hang in a gallery during Art Basel 2008. Ignacio Gurruchaga, owner of the INDEPENDENT GALLERY in Wynwood worked with me tirelessly but he also helped to hang my father’s photography. My father covered Miami as a photographer when the city was beginning to come into its own. In the 50s and 60s the city hosted iconic individuals; Elvis Presley, The Beatles, candidate and soon to President John F. Kennedy, Cassius Clay and Cuban dictator Fidel Castro, he had an infamous impact on the city. This was mid-century Miami, a time when the world was seeing this city take its place on the international set. We called the show “INTERSECTION”, a city where these iconic figures almost bumped shoulders within a few short years. The show was an incredible experience, two rooms filled with photographs from two generations from the same city, the same family, my family.

Opening night was busy with a curator from New York buying three Corridor prints without hesitation. Then my friend Kerry Sanders of NBC News delivered as promised, he walked in with Kimberly Marrero, Curator and Art Advisor at the Guggenheim in New York City. She loved both shows encouraging me to contact the International Center of Photography and show them The Corridor. The show hit its final peak one night when Ignacio called me and said Lenny Kravitz is in the gallery and wants to meet you. After four hours of talking photography, Lenny is also a photographer, we traded prints and planned to meet later and pursue a project together. He is on tour in Europe now and has just recorded a new album. This was truly a treat, and he is truly an artist in every aspect, the image he offered me could hang in any gallery respectfully. I currently have several projects or shows in the works for Art Basel 2009. And yes, my mother was at the show.

IT BEGAN AT THE BEACH



After a year of shaping my vision for a new photography business I’m finally close to marketing the photography site. Bella Famiglia Photography started with my friend Buddy, owner of the SouthPort Raw Bar, asking me to photograph his pregnant wife Noi. When asked I immediately remembered the photograph I shot of my godson’s mother on Fort Lauderdale beach. Veronica and I were driving along A1A near Las Olas, I had a white Roman column in the back seat of my car and she was 8 months pregnant. I suggested we take the column on the beach and have her sit on the column for a photograph, with a Hasselblad film camera. I think it took less than five minutes to shoot the picture.

Fast forward 11 years, me with more photography experience and seeing the same image with Noi except executed with location lights and the latest digital equipment. A full fashion shoot, the one that makes the bathers wonder who is that famous model. We arrived at the beach, battled 20kt winds with flying sand, I used Buddy as a light stand to hold the soft box and watching him point the light everywhere but at his wife. The shoot was a total struggle. But the reward came at Noi’s shower, she unwrapped the picture and began to cry, months of carrying the child she expressed her love for Buddy and how he has been a wonderful husband while she held the framed print. It only equaled the time that Todd, my godson’s father and Veronica’s husband, walked into my house and saw the photograph of his wife with child on the column on the beach. “The most beautiful picture I have ever seen," Todd said.

I couldn’t think of any better reason for Bella Famiglia Photograhy to be, I had taken photographs that truly offered my closest friends a special memory to have for life. And those memories will always be with me, and it makes Bella Famiglia Photography a passion more than a business.