The Gallery
Where abstract intense chromatic compositions converge with representational imagery describing the engineering of the automobiles photographed
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   In a galley setting there is always a  discussion with the artist about his work. Lift your glass of wine, single malt, micro brew, here goes…
   Having trained as a technical illustrator during the art school years, I saw photography as my abstract medium. A visual platform upon which shape, light and color could be examined for its own sake, as opposed to a representational portrayal of instantaneous journalistic storytelling.
   In moving into automotive photography a few decades ago I saw the potential of bringing the two worlds together: portraying the near abstract compositions of shape, light and color, while clearly, if subtly, representing the engineering and performance inherent in the subject.
   There is also a third element here, specific to automotive photography. Having spent a professional life in the photo studio, art directing product photography, my photographic style clearly states that it is only beneath natural light that the automobile truly reveals itself.
As implied by the two images presented below, the gallery is of two parts, the film and the digital.
Here we have the link to the film gallery.
   The significance of the film gallery is this, prior to photography going digital, film had reached an absolute apex of image capture quality. Now when I say film, I mean film emulsion. For the art of photography was the ability of the photographer to shoot to the capability and character of the film's emulsion. The black and white shots that need to be taken with ultra sensitive Tri-X film, or the slower to expose Plus-X. As examples.
   As the above abstract composition comment implies, my world was the color films, the Kodacolor, the Ektachrome, each with their very different color capture spectrums and ASA exposures.
   For each composition was imagined then rendered by the photographer through knowledge of film emulsion. This is a discipline the digital photographer will never know.
   For the following gallery the film used, since the 1990s, has been Fujifilm's Velvia 50. Having always gone for the intense chromatic imagery, this film was a normal outgrowth of that journey. This is a very high saturation film, and a very high contrast film. As such it is a very tricky film. It can fall into nothingness, with immediacy, on either end of aperture or speed. As such it requires the focus and method of numerous exposures to realize one good shot. So each photograph displayed here is the result of between six and ten exposures. Those marine layer mornings at Pebble, and pale foggy's at Laguna Seca can be tricky.
The digital gallery? Well it comes with its own sarcastic introduction.
And yes, current method photo enlargements are offered in very limited numbers. Would like some more information? Drop a line...email us.