William Karl Valentine: The Eaton Fire - LENSCRATCH
I am pleased to announce that Aline Smithson is showcasing my Eaton Fire Portfolio today, which is the one-year anniversary of the fire.
William Karl Valentine: The Eaton Fire - LENSCRATCH
I am pleased to announce that Aline Smithson is showcasing my Eaton Fire Portfolio today, which is the one-year anniversary of the fire.
CA DSC 8334 12-16-25
When I began photographing the aftermath of the Eaton Fire last January 2025, I came across numerous homes that still had Christmas decorations up when they were destroyed. Wreaths were still hung on fences, burnt strands of lights, and melted decorations. Every time I saw that it magnified the fact that each mound of rubble had been a family's home. Everything I saw obviously was a reminder but with Christmas you think of joy and hope, children, and home. When I saw homes in April and May that hadn’t burned but still had Christmas decorations up, I knew those people were still displaced waiting to get their homes cleaned. I reminded me that the impact went beyond just the homes that were lost.
This year I have returned to some areas multiple times to photograph. There is one lot that the homeowner decorated for every holiday. The Werewolf of Altadena also changed attire for holidays, and this past month I saw lots of people making a point to recognize the hope of Christmas by still decorating in some way. In Upper Hastings Ranch the community there has a long tradition of decorating each street as a different theme. I remember going there as a child and my parents driving me around to see the lights. Dozens of homes were lost in Upper Hastings Ranch and the association there has placed a lighted star in front of each house that was lost. One owner set up a Nativity Scene where their home once stood. I have seen lots of signs of hope and resilience throughout the burn zone. This past month I have met people effected by the fire and with each conversation I have been impressed with their resolve.
As we approach the 1st anniversary of the fire on January 7th, I wanted to showcase my recent images from Altadena and Pasadena to show how far people have come and how much further the area has to go to recover.
Christmas Tree Lane - Altadena
Deodar Pine trees line Santa Rosa Avenue in Altadena and for 105 years the residents have hung Christmas lights on the trees. Miraculously none of the trees were lost in the Eaton Fire (the trees have properties that protect them from fires) but unfortunately several homes on the street were lost. At least one of the homes has already started reconstruction. It is a tradition I remember from my Childhood and I am so grateful that it wasn’t lost in the fire.
Adrian Molina - Owner of Sidecca
CA DSC 5920 11-30-25 Adrian Molina
Sidecca is a boutique shop in Altadena on Lake Avenue which survived the fire with just smoke damage. They have long carried Altadena themed products and really represents the community well. I was able to get Adriana to pose for a photo shortly after she reopened in November. She had to shut down again a couple weeks ago when heavy rains caused massive leaks in her shop. She is amazingly resilient, and I am sure she will be back because I know her customers will continue to rally around her. www.sidecca.com
A Couple Images from my Phone:
Finally, two images from my phone. One from Christmas Eve when I found a house that is in the process of being framed where the owner had hung a wreath on the plywood. The other is something my phone created when I apparently moved during a long exposure in Hastings Ranch. Happy New Year and may the recovery from the Eaton Fire pick up speed in 2026. Lots of people still hurting up there.
Harold Jones’s print that he sent me this past Fall.
In 2020 I went to the Legacy of LIGHT symposium at the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona, in Tucson. It was held in January and commemorated the 50th Anniversary of the LIGHT gallery in New York City. LIGHT was the first gallery dedicated solely to exhibiting and marketing Photographs. The Gallery had a huge impact on the establishment of the medium as an artform and its impact on the medium was incredible.
Harold Jones was the first Director of the LIGHT gallery. In 1975 Harold was recruited to be the first Director of the Center of Creative Photography. He taught at the University of Arizona while leading CCP for 30 years and has maintained his ties to CCP and the U of A since he retired. Harold is an icon in the history of the medium of Photography as an artist, educator, curator, and director.
I was fortunate to have one of my prints included in the exhibition that was held in conjunction with the symposium. I went out for the exhibition opening as well as for the symposium. The opening was good, and the symposium was incredible. As soon as I saw the exhibition, which was amazing, I knew how important the exhibition and symposium were going to be. I photographed the opening, and when I returned for the symposium, I had already decided to photograph as much as I could to document that event. I authored a number of blog posts about LIGHT, and I also mailed out prints to people who I met or saw at the symposium. I sent a group of prints for people at CCP in a single package but unfortunately it shipped in March 2020 just as the Covid lockdown was starting. The package was misplaced and not found until this past summer. The folks at CCP then distributed the photos to everyone including forwarding the photos for Harold, who moved to Oregon when he retired. I didn’t know all this until I got an email from Harold in September thanking me for the prints and asking for my mailing address.
I sent a reply with my address, and we had a couple emails back and forth. Harold’s emails are fun; he attached a vintage photo of a Canon Camera production line on one then a very appropriate cartoon for me personally on another. Our exchanges were validating, and I especially loved when he thanked me for being a photographer before the age of the cell phone. He absolutely sees the dangers of the cell phone photography culture for the medium of photography.
A couple weeks after our exchanges I received the above print from Harold. I am so honored that a person of Harold’s stature would take the time to thank me in such a way. Without a doubt this is the coolest gift I received this year. As a photographer I get this on every level, especially the process. It is an incredible thank you gift. It is also a great example of what photographers are. You can’t shut off seeing images. This also isn’t an image you can appreciate in an Instagram post. You can’t appreciate the layers of meaning in a 2 second view and swipe.
I know it was a private gift, but I felt the need to showcase it because Harold is an amazing person and was so influential for the medium of Photography on so many levels/
Grandma Bernice - Balboa Island - Halloween 2010
I saw a post on Facebook today by a friend who lost her forty-year-old son a couple months ago after a lifelong debilitating illness. She shared a series of Halloween photographs when her son was still a very mobile child dressed up and obviously having so much fun. She posted more photos through the years and wrote how much they loved Halloween and how hard this first Halloween without him is. She was showing to her friends how thankful she was for all the years with him and also showing her grief in those images. Her son was wheelchair bound for over half his life, but it didn’t stop the adventures they had together. He had a Make-A-Wish trip to visit the President at the White House, and he got out to Kings game here in LA. Everywhere they went my friend photographed the adventure. I assume knowing her son would have a short time on earth she wanted to capture and preserve every moment so she could cherish them forever. She also documented the simple moments too like dogs curled up with him on the bed. Obviously, you can see the grief with the loss, she openly owns it, but in every image, I can see how much she loves her son and that she cherished every moment with him.
Her post today hit home for me. Her snapshots captured so much about life it motivated me to reflect and eventually write this post. I have always loved Halloween especially when my kids were in the innocent years of Trick or Treating. Probably the pinnacle year was the one where my daughter and her friend couldn’t decide on a costume. Late in the afternoon we came up with the idea they would dress up as old ladies. They grabbed a bunch of her grandmother’s clothing, reading glasses, walkers, and way too much lipstick and my daughter created the character Grandma Bernice. We took them down to Balboa Island, one of the prime candy spots in Newport Beach. It is always packed and fun. As my daughter and her friend went from house to house they stayed in character and as I followed behind them at a distance, I could hear other people talking how great their costumes were. I had a camera of course and I am so happy I documented that night because it was amazing. As a parent you know you only get so many nights like that with your kids before they grow up.
I know I started this post with a sad subject, but I trust everyone sees the message is to cherish life, to live it, and that it is awesome we have the ability to document the images so easily now. BUT still make prints, have a camera other than your phone, and back up everything off site (I have talked to a few people who lost all their photographs in Altadena, and they were not backup someplace). Happy Halloween 2025
CHI DSC 03324 7-18-25 - ©2025 WILLIAM KARL VALENTINE
I have spent the majority of 2025 focused on my Eaton Fire Portfolio. I have said it in other posts how documenting the devastation in Altadena is unlike anything else I have experienced. The process is so different from what I am used to and it’s so methodical. Because everything was static after the fire you might think it was easier but since I am revisiting the area so often, I have a better understanding of the loss and the weight of the grief up there. It might seem static up there, but it is equally intense. So, it was very good to get to Chicago again in July and get back to photographing the street which is such a different process.
We stayed at The Gwen hotel and the first day I was in Chicago I saw the image above when we left the hotel and were walking across the street to eat at Joe’s. I had not walked more than 50 yards even when I saw this mom with the stroller and the cellphone. What was unique is I saw this image coming for a long way and had plenty of time to think about my framing. Usually, I see an image and react to it on the street, but I had so much time with this image I was actually thankful for it before I made the exposure. It felt like a sign of confirmation I was doing what I was supposed to be doing.
I have photographed in Chicago a lot since my first visit in 1987. The city is fantastic, and I think it has some of the best light in the world to photograph usually. The next four image are examples of that light. Since the city is somewhat spacious not only does light come in more but also allows you to move easier to frame images. I also have an interest in seeing people photograph with cellphones and that is here too.
Every visit I have spent some time on Michigan Avenue photographing. The images seem to document our society well and they are different that New York or San Francisco. There have always been a few people on Michigan Avenue panhandling, some I would see in the same spot year after year. I noticed the influx of South American migrants in March of 2024 near the civic center but not on Michigan Avenue, this year they were also up on Michigan Avenue.
It was awesome to get back to Wrigley Field. My last time there was opening day in 2017, before the Ivy had come back, so it was extra nice to see the Ivy. I took my first nighttime architecture cruise which was perfect in July since the sun was just setting. The architecture in Chicago is the best North America. My daughter went to grad school at Northwestern and stayed in Chicago after she graduated. She now lives in the West Loop so that is helping me explore even more areas of the city.
I have photographed in museums for years, and I actually have a solid portfolio of images which I intend to publish as a book one day. The Art Institute is an amazing space, I always get something there, it is rich with images of people photographing masterpiece paintings with cellphone cameras. The wedding photographer was something unique I had not seen before, but the highlight image was the one of my kids looking at a blank wall like it was an art piece. I don’t know if it was Alyssa or Brent’s idea because I just turned and saw them and knew exactly what they were doing. I am so thankful I got that image, says a lot about their relationship. What made it even better is a few people migrated over there to check out the artwork they were admiring. Art needs to be fun sometimes, so does life.
My daughter’s friend works at Salesforce and this year she took us up to their building’s observation decks and employee lounge. The building is at the “T” of the Chicago River so it allowed me a different view of the city, it was hazier than I would have liked but still a great experience.
A lot of people complain about O’Hare Airport, and I get it, I ended up in the “Penalty Box” for a half hour going in on this trip (stuck on the plane parked waiting for a gate to open) and have done that before, but I still like the airport for some reason. Probably because I have so many great memories of Chicago. I still think the walkway between the terminals is cool and I have my food spots. The open glass design of the terminals also makes photographing in there easier (Homage to Garry Winogrand).
CHI DSC 3588 7-21-25 ©2025 WILLIAM KARL VALENTINE
“Pontification” William Karl Valentine 2025
The highlight of the Art Institute visit in July was without a doubt the Gustave Caillebotte: Painting His World exhibition which I am covering in a separate blog post. There is always something to see at the Art Institute of Chicago because their permanent collections are so amazing, and the space itself is so beautiful, I always love going there. Some of my favorite spaces are The Photography, Film, and Media galleries in the Modern wing. They are the perfect size, next to a high traffic area, with some good light, they are perfect. I have a personal goal to exhibit work in that space one day. Unfortunately, on this trip that gallery was closed for a new installation, and I think it was also closed during my trip last year too. As luck would have it, most of the downstairs photography gallery, in the Lower Level of the original building, was also closed to install new work. Bad timing on my part but then that gave me more time to see other things. This post is also overdue so I will use the gallery below to showcase some of the things that I enjoyed this trip.
The image below documents the joyful experience of spending time with a Photographer when they are looking at prints or are actively photographing (or doing both):
“Paris Street; Rainy Day” 1877 Artist: Gustave Caillebotte (French, 1848–1894)
Part of the reason I am a photographer is because I was never able to draw perfectly or at least as good as I wanted to. As a child my mom taught me how to paint with watercolor, and I enjoyed the process but didn’t always like how careful you had to be not to accidentally mix colors. In college I learned more about painting and really came to appreciate painting with acrylics (oils were amazing but the drying part didn’t work for me. The combination of colors, the undercoats, and the brush stroke techniques were amazing. I like a wide variety of painters, but photorealism is my favorite style (shocking I know). I especially like the work of painters Wayne Thiebaud and Maynard Dixon.
I visit Chicago a fair amount and go to the Art Institute most every trip, so I have maintained membership for a while. The reciprocal benefits are great, and it is extra incentive to stop in. Because of this I was very familiar with Gustave Caillebotte’s Paris Street Rainy Day 1877 since it is usually on display as part of their permanent collection. I knew the painting was important, but I didn’t know very much about Caillebotte until I saw the exhibition Gustave Caillebotte: Painting His World in July.
Gustave Caillebotte 1848 -1894
Best known for his association with Impressionism, a 19th Century art movement that sought to capture fleeting moments in modern life through experiments with light and color, Caillebotte painted people who were part of his everyday experiences. Because he was independently wealthy he could paint whatever he wanted to because he didn’t have to rely on sales to support himself.
I learned a long time ago to look at paintings from several different distances. Back a few feet to see the entire piece to understand the subject and over all design then up close to see the craftsmanship of the brush strokes. While studying at Arizona State University I had to take a Color Theory course which taught me to understand combination of colors to produce effects. When I started the class I didn’t think I needed it because I predominantly photographed with Black & White film and didn’t understand what I would get out of it. Luckily I had an open mind because by the time I finished the 3 unit course I understood how important the knowledge was. It really deepened my appreciation of painting and design and now that I photograph mostly with digital cameras, I consider color combinations often.
I have always liked Paris Street Rainy Day, and I had examined the brush strokes before, but I had never examined other works by Caillebotte. Seeing other paintings by Caillebotte helped me understand his style. I was in awe of how he worked with a seemingly dull or dark pallet that actually was subtly vibrant. There was so much information in the exhibition that I came away feeling I had a good understanding of Caillebotte as a painter and of his life.
The curation for this exhibition was outstanding. The design of the space, the wall colors, the accompanying text, the selected paintings, and the other artifacts like the photograph of Caillebotte and period specific hats. I am so thankful I saw this exhibition and grateful to the staff that curated and assembled it.
One amazing part of the exhibition was the map of Paris that marked the location of the paintings in relationship to Caillebotte’s residence. This was so well done and so interesting. Maybe it is my Detective past, I love the details and finding clues within images, in this case paintings. When I was looking at the map it hit me how similar Caillebotte was to a documentary photographer. He documented his neighborhood and made paintings of everyday things that could often be overlooked, and he made images that were outstanding. His approach, “the process” really shown through to me. The show was one of the best “non-photo” solo exhibitions I have ever seen, it really exceeded my expectations.
I have said this before that for a photographer to grow they need to see good work. They need to see what an excellent print looks like and they need to examine it up close. Seeing good craftsmanship, no matter the medium, always helps me sharp my photography saw. I am sorry I was delayed with this post but hopefully some of you who read this had a chance to see the exhibition. For everyone I have enclosed the gallery of images below to showcase it.
This is just a quick blog post to let everyone know that All About Photo.com just featured me and my Eaton Fire Portfolio on the website. Sandrine Hermand-Grisel was fantastic to work with, and I am really happy with how the article looks.
I know I have said this a lot, but I know I was at the right place at the right time for a reason, so I am committed to telling the story of the Eaton Fire and the impact it had on so many people. I am always thankful when I can exhibit work in a gallery or get my images showcased online, especially on an outstanding photography site like All About Photo.com.
William Karl Valentine and Frank Schlegel last Saturday at the opening of The BAG’s first all photography exhibition.
The BAG (Baldwin Avenue Gallery) in Sierra Madre was started during the Pandemic by Mary Hoffman-Serr and her husband Michael Todd Serr. Both had real jobs in business and the entertainment industry, but both also had a passion for art as well. The timing apparently worked out well because they created a jip gallery space in the heart of Sierra Madre’s vibrant downtown area. I first heard about this gallery t last week when I saw my good friend post an exhibition announcement about this exhibition.
Here is a link to another great article about Michael Todd Serr.
This is the gallery’s first ever all photography exhibition and it is dedicated to renowned photographer Douglas Kirkland whose son Mark is a featured photographer in this exhibit of 11 photographers.
From his website: Mark Kirkland is a three-time Emmy award-winning director (The Simpsons), an award-winning filmmaker, writer/director. He studied drawing, animation, filmmaking and received a BFA degree from The California Institute of The Arts (CalArts). Kirkland is an associate member of the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) and a former Governor for the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. He has a life long interest in fine art and illustration and is a avid sketchbook artist.
Mark Kirkland & Frank Schlegel
The gallery space and the exhibition both exceeded my expectations. It lots of linear wall space and the potential to be reconfigured as needed. Mary and Micharl did a great job developing this space. Sierra Madre is often overlooked because it is a sleepy little town between Pasadena and Arcadia but it is an amazing little town (Sierra Madre is so quiet it doesn’t have any traffic lights, except for those on the borders with other cities). This gallery is located in the heart of downtown where there is so much foot traffic. If you know Sierra Madre, you will know why I think this space is perfect for this location.
Monday - Thursday By Appointment Only
Friday: 5pm - 9pm
Saturday: 12pm - 5pm
Sunday: 12pm - 5pm
12 N. Baldwin Avenue, Sierra Madre CA 91024 info@baldwinavenuegallery.com
1-626-921-0234
Me, Gizmo, and Ave - Santa Monica
On August 16th I drove up to Santa Monica to meet up with Alex Turner who was giving a talk at Marshall Gallery about his current exhibition there. I had called one of my favorite LA photographer friends, Ave Pildas , on the way up to see if he wanted to join me. Ave, who lives in Santa Monica, couldn’t make the lecture, but said he would be home later if I could stop by after, which I did.
We were catching up in his studio space and during the conversation I told Ave that I really wanted to add one of his prints to my collection and I specifically asked about his photograph of three Long Beach PD color guard officers. He was happy that I wanted a print and agreed to make this print below for me.
I first learned about Ave’s work seven years during a visit to Arcana Books. I saw his self-published book Street / People on a feature rack, and I immediately related to his photographs. I especially liked the image above of the color guard officers. I bought the books and finally met Ave when Arcana held a book signing for his book Star Struck which was published by Deadbeat Club. Since then, we have become good friends, so it became a priority for me to get at least one of his prints.
While Ave was getting ready to make my print, I got to go through his working prints for his Liemert Park Portfolio. It was exciting getting to see so many different images from this portfolio because I remember him telling be in October of 2023 he was thinking about starting to photograph there. At the time we were together photographing in the Eagle Rock area, and we were talking about other areas of Los Angeles that would be good to document. He checked it out the following week and he has been photographing there regularly since and has really come to know that community. The work is solid and important because it documents an important neighborhood in Los Angeles’s history. I hope the right people discover this portfolio and find it several good homes; it has value.
Ave Pildas’s Leimert Park Portfolio
Ave has been documenting Los Angeles for a long time, so it was of little surprise when he proudly told me that the Los Angeles Times was publishing a feature Sunday article the next day built on his 1980 Venice Beach photoshoot of seven of LA’s prominent young architects (Frederick Fisher, Robert Mangurian, Eric Owen Moss, Coy Howard, Craig Hodgetts, Thom Mayne, and Frank Gehry).
Here is a link to the article and photographs of it are below. I am so jealous of how much energy Ave has; he is really focused now on preserving his archive as well as still getting out there to keep photographing.
Finally just a few more photos from Gizmo’s photoshoot that we got in while Ave was printing my photograph.
Alex Turner and me at Marshall Gallery.
On August 16th I was able to get up to the Marshall Gallery at Bergamont Station, in Santa Monica, to hear Alex Turner talk about his current exhibition Blind Forest which closes today. Heidi Volpe (Director of Photography, Patagonia) hosted the discussion whoch also included Kaya & Blank, video artists who also have a video installation up at Marshall. This is Alex’s second solo exhibition at Marshall, having previously exhibited his Blind River portfolio there in 2023.
Alex Turner (born 1984 in Chicago) is currently a Los Angeles based photographer who received his MFA from the University of Arizona in 2020. I met him in January of 2020 at the Center for Creative Photography’s Legacy of LIGHT Symposium and have followed his career since then.
With Blind Forest, Alex used a hunting scope with a built in infrared camera to capture thermal images of the forest around him. Most every photograph in this was a montage of 150 small image files stitched together digitally to create one larger image file. Those image files are sent to his printer who uses a special digital enlarger that projects a negative image of the file on to Silver Gelatin paper that is then processed in a traditional manner. When he explained the process I had to admit to him that I had never heard of it before. Alex explained how he had been dissatisfied with his early prints on digital paper so he found this other alternative. The prints are beautiful, his decision was correct. With a Google search I found several different companies who provide this service including this one that stood out to me. The Blind Forest images are impressive, and I especially like how the thermal imaging captured artifacts in the trees that Alex could not see with his naked eye; like the carvings in a tree which had apparently healed but the scarred area gave off different heat signatures.
I loved some of Alex’s Bling River photographs when I discovered his work, but I also remember wondering where he would be able to go from there, he has definitely answered that question. I love our medium of photography and how inclusive it can be to so many different lens-based artists. I encourage you to also follow Alex Turner’s career. I have linked several outstanding articles below the gallery of images in this post.
Marshall Gallery is located in Bergamont Station at 2525 Michigan Avenure, #A6, Santa Monica, California and is open from 12pm to 7pm Tuesday - Saturday. It is a great space and Bergamont Station is my favorite gallery community in Southern California, I can always find an interesting exhibition there.
Alex Turner’s Exhibition Statement:
BLIND FOREST My work navigates the intersections of ecology, technology, and human experience, and Blind Forest embodies this approach through an extended study of trees as both ecological keystones and mirrors of human intent. Set across the diverse landscapes of California, the project uses thermal imaging—a tool of surveillance, fire detection, and tree health assessment—to reveal what lies beyond the visible: the conservation, transmission, and dispersion of heat through living systems. Created in collaboration with ecologists, natural historians, and cultural anthropologists, Blind Forest reflects a cross-disciplinary inquiry into how natural systems absorb, reflect, and archive cultural and natural histories. Using a thermal hunting scope mounted on a panoramic tripod head, I construct largescale images from hundreds of exposures, mapping thermodynamic activity in precise detail. In doing so, I treat heat not just as data, but as narrative—a record of vitality, decay, stress, and transition. Trees are long-living witnesses to environmental and human histories, and they carry evidence of shifting climates, displaced communities, and evolving systems of power in their bark, roots, and canopies,. From junipers and pinyon pines valued by Indigenous communities, to redwoods logged for empire and citrus groves that once symbolized prosperity, the species featured in Blind Forest trace overlapping tensions—extraction and preservation, survival and erasure, change and continuity. Blind Forest questions what it means to see—and what is made visible or concealed through the tools we use to understand the world. Thermal imaging extends human perception but also implicates us in systems of control. By turning this apparatus toward the forest, I aim to collapse the distance between scientific observation and poetic witnessing, rendering the unseen visible and inviting viewers to reconsider their relationship to place, memory, and environmental urgency. Ultimately, Blind Forest asks how we document and understand the slow, often invisible forces that shape our surroundings. It positions trees not as passive scenery, but as active participants—living archives that conserve, transmit, and disperse meaning across generations. In a moment of ecological precarity, Blind Forest prompts reflection on the fragile systems we inherit, inhabit, and either sustain or destroy.
Additional information about Alex Turner :
Musee Magazine 2025 article on Blind Forest - This is an outstanding interview!
Los Angeles - CA DSC 02947 6-28-85
Since January 7th of this year, I have been all in documenting the Eaton Fire devastation in Altadena and Pasadena. For the first time in years, I didn’t make it out to Arizona in March to photograph Cactus League which still has my yearly clock off. I did get up to Sacramento in June for a weekend and to Chicago for a long weekend in July. After dealing with so much Eaton Fire content it was good to get back on the street photographing. It is a completely different way of photographing, and I have missed that.
This week I started to unclutter my computer desktop, and I found a bunch of good images that I had not posted to my website, a bunch of photographs from 2011. So I have focused the last couple days on updating many of my portfolios with more images.
So, this blog post is pretty simple, I am announcing that I have posted more images to a number of my portfolios. I really tried to showcase more of my Los Angeles work and add more Chicago work. I also added more photographs to my New York and Cemetery Portfolios too. Hopefully you will enjoy the new images and please check back often for more content.
Fahey Klein Gallery - Los Angeles
Unfortunately, I was not able to make this opening and only got to see the exhibition just before it closed a few weeks ago, but the work is incredible, and I wanted to make sure I wrote something about it.
I think Lauren is an incredible photographer and I think her body of work will be an important archive for future generations attempting to understand the societal changes which have occurred with the growth of cellular phones and massive amount of available digital content we have experienced in the first quarter of this century.
Like most every good documentary photographer the biggest key to her success gaining access and building trust with the people she is photographing. She also has technical skills and crafts powerful images. I have known about Lauren’s work for some time, and I specifically remember years ago, when my daughter was a teen, she found Lauren’s book 2002 book “Girl Culture” on my bookshelf, and she fell in love with it.
Fahey Klein describes the exhibition as follows:
Lauren Greenfield: Social Studies, a new photographic exhibition that revisits the terrain of youth culture and identity formation in the digital age. Expanding on her acclaimed five-part docuseries of the same name, Social Studies (FX/Hulu) marks Greenfield’s return to a subject she has explored since her groundbreaking 1997 debut, Fast Forward: Growing Up in the Shadow of Hollywood.
Shot during the 2021–2022 school year across Los Angeles—a city synonymous with image and aspiration—Social Studies follows a diverse group of teens navigating high school, home life, and relationships under the influence of ever-present social media. This new body of work builds on Greenfield’s legacy as a visual sociologist, capturing the tensions between online performance and private identity, aspiration and anxiety, vulnerability and self-curation. Lauren Greenfield’s photographic approach parallels her immersive filmmaking: both document a reality that is evolving in real-time.
Lauren Greenfield: Social Studies is a continuation and an evolution of the artist’s decades-long interrogation of American culture. Through the raw honesty of her subjects and the clarity of her vision, Greenfield creates a powerful meditation on adolescence, what she calls “comparison culture”, and the search for authenticity in a curated world. As she continues to investigate the themes of status, beauty, identity, and power, this new series reflects her ongoing commitment to making the invisible visible—revealing how young people see themselves and how we construct and consume those images.
The most incredible element of this exhibit is the fact most subjects allowed Greenfield’s team to capture thousands of hours of their screen time. Greenfield then edited the material and combined images of screen capture with her portraits to make an incredible montage that most accurately documents the experience these teens are having online. It is so well done and so powerful. Another incredible thing with Greenfield’s subject is many attended Pali High which was destroyed in the Pacific Palisades Fire this past January. That fact deepens the value of this project for me.
As a street photographer I have long been aware of the impact that the cell phone has had on our society. I remember photographing in New York during the summer of 1988 and how banks of payphones were commonplace, and they were gathering spots for teens. In the late 1990’s to early 2000’s I would see more and more cellphones in my photographs each year and less payphones. Today it is nearly impossible to photograph on the street without seeing someone on the phone or someone holding a phone. People are absorbed by the content on their phones and many young ladies seem to walk with phones in their hands as if they phones provide some amount of immediate security. The impact of the cellphone is obviously a double-edged sword and worthy of its own blog post later, I just mention this because I am glad Lauren did such a deep dive into the subject and that she it did it so well.
I also picked up a copy of Lauren’s massive 500-page 2017 book “Generation Wealth” on my visit (I already had copies of Fast Forward and Girl Culture in my library). The book is an incredible documentation of wealthy societies and individuals. I am in awe how many places she has been able to get to and the images she has captured. The logistics of travel alone would be more of a challenge than I could handle let alone the photographing and filming aspect. There is one epic point in this book (pages 226-227) where she documents New Years Eve parties in St. Bartz. On Page 226 there is a 1998 image with Harvey Weinstein talking with Arista Records’s Clive Davis and Sir Michael Caine. There was a comment in the title that people knew they had status when they were invited to Davis’s New Years Eve party. On the opposite page was an image of Diddy (29-year-old Sean Combs at the time) at his 1999 New Years Eve party at Feeling Nightclub making a woman expose her breast to gain access to his party. It is an amazing pairing of images especially when you consider the book was first published in 2017, a year before Weinstein was arrested.
There is so much content in this book I probably won’t ever get through it all, but it is an incredible document that will provide future generation of researchers lots of material to consider. I have so much respect for Lauren as a photographer, she has been able to capture so many amazing images that document our era.
I also want to thank Heather Cronan and Nicole Boyle at Fahey Klein for their time pointing out some incredible details in the exhibition. I have talked with them on other visits, and they have always been great hosts who are obviously passionate about the medium of photography.
3516 N. Fair Oaks Avenue, Altadena, California after the Eaton Fire on January 7th. CA DSC 4767 04-14-2025
I am extremely honored to announce that Dr. Rebecca Senf from the Center of Creative Photography has selected the above photograph for exhibition in the Houston Center for Photography’s 42nd Annual Center Exhibition. It opens Thursday June 12, 2025, and closes on Sunday August 17th, 2025.
My Eaton Fire Portfolio began on January 7th, 2025, when a fire started in Eaton Canyon (above Pasadena and East of Altadena) and quickly spread because of unusually high winds. I have chronicled details in previous blog posts and my web page for the portfolio. I knew right away I was witnessing something historic, and I felt compelled to document it. I was initially focused on the fire and the destruction but as I have returned over 25 different days since the fire I find I am document more individual loss and how people are dealing with the aftermath. I also soon recognized the destructive nature of the fire left behind many forms and shapes that were beautiful and often powerful. In January I was already taking notice of the frames within a frame caused by the fire. The image above is from a home in the Jane’s Village neighborhood of Altadena. The diamond shape to the right was a window that burned away allowing the viewer to see the brick fireplace. The rectangles on the left side of the image are a covered porch, a front window and a rear window. The exposure was around sunset causing the hue cast. What remains of the home address numbers are the black or grey blobs to the lower left of the diamond window as you face it. Altadena is a wonderfully eclectic and diverse community covering 12 square miles North of the City of Pasadena. Altadena lost over 9,000 structures in the fires.
The Center Annual is Houston Center for Photography’s yearly group exhibition that seeks to highlight and provide insight into current themes, technologies, and practices in photography. This year’s exhibition features 47 diverse works from members of our global photography community and was selected by a Dr. Rebecca Senf who is Chief Curator at the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona, in Tucson. Her B.A. in Art History is from the University of Arizona; her M.A. and Ph.D. were awarded by Boston University. In 2012, her book Reconstructing the View: The Grand Canyon Photographs of Mark Klett and Byron Wolfe was released by University of California Press; in 2017, her book To Be Thirteen, showcasing the work of Betsy Schneider, was published by Radius Press and Phoenix Art Museum. She has curated fifty exhibitions, including her recent Richard Avedon: Relationships which was shown in Milan and Palermo, Italy and Rotterdam, in The Netherlands, and has contributed chapters, interviews, and essays to over a dozen publications. Senf is an Ansel Adams scholar, and in 2020 released a book on Adams’s early years, called Making a Photographer, copublished by the CCP and Yale University Press, now in a second printing.
Dr. Senf & CCP’s recent Instagram post: “Picture Party: Celebrating the Collection at 50,” on view through December 20, 2025, at CCP’s Alice Chaiten Baker Interdisciplinary Gallery.
The Houston Center for Photography galleries are always free and open to the public.
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Jane’s Village - Altadena CA DSC_0281 01-25-2025 William Karl Valentine
When I started photographing the Eaton Fire on the night of January 6th I was just trying to document everything I could since I knew the event was going to be historic. I obviously had no idea that fire would eventually destroy 9,000 homes and kill 30 people in a twelve square mile are of Altadena and Pasadena.
January 25th was the first day I could really get up into the hardest hit areas because the area had been closed before then. It was obvious to document the scale of the devastation but as I was doing that I also was looking for forensic evidence of how the fire moved through the neighborhoods and the individual properties. I also found that I was photographing with an artistic eye.
At times I have felt a little bad about looking for beautiful or artistic elements in the frame because I am documenting the worst event in so many people’s lives. But I know my intent isn’t to exploit their loss and I know it is good to look for beauty in the midst of something very ugly sometimes. As a photographer I think I do that a fair amount, I like to work in hard areas. The fire created a lot of dramatic images by how it destroyed things. With trees and bushes the fire removed the leaves to expose the shape of the trunk and blackened it to create contrast. With plaster walls the heat of the flames altered the hues on some walls and often created a split tone effect like what you can do with a silver gelatin print. Burned out windows created frames within a frame and unique images. Photographing after the rain came was also visually interesting because metal debris quickly rusted and turned bright orange which was another contrast.
A month or so ago I traded correspondence with a curator who I know, and she asked me about my editing process for the Eaton Fire Portfolio. It was an outstanding question, and I hit her with a super long reply because I also wanted to answer the question myself. I knew describing the process would have value at some point for others viewing the work or trying to better understand me as a photographer. It was also good exercise for me to complete while building the portfolio. To answer the editing question, I first had to think about the photography process. Below is some of what I wrote in my reply:
I’ve seen the world in 2:3 rectangle frames for a long time now so when I started documenting the devastation I was conscious of the elements within the frame. The big difference with this work is that most of the subject matter is static (My cemetery portfolio is very similar). So, I have been more methodical, I find something that interests me, tells the story, and I photograph it from multiple angles. I look for ways to bring out the important information and I try different focal length lenses. I also usually explore the general area for other images. January 25th was incredible because I drove up to see the condition of Mountain View Cemetery where most of my family is buried and nearby there were lots of burned businesses. I started photographing the businesses because the images were obvious. A wall with “Western Fence Co, Since 1967” and everything else gone, that image was obvious I just needed to frame it properly. Across the street the meeting hall which I later figured out was a Bible study, the burnt billboard, and the packed used car lot were all powerful subject. When I was photographing the car lot I noticed the streams of melted metals on the asphalt and then really homed in on detail as well. The shapes and forms of the metal were beautiful and so I worked with that. But the melted metal also documented the power and intensity of the firestorm.
The car lot was on the edge of the Jane’s Village neighborhood and almost all the homes on the block West of the car lot were gone. I walked into that area thinking the mass devastation would be the primary subject matter. It was but then I found the concrete flamingos that survived and partial walls with window openings that created frames within the frame. The burn patterns were interesting. The plaster on many houses changed color in the fire and it is incredible how it resembled a “Split Tone”, usually in the complimentary colors red and green, or better described as a light maroon and olive. The flames also left interesting designs on the plaster. It left different markings where it came out of vents, versus when it was burning a material against the house. The wood framing of some homes burned away but left black marks on the standing plaster wall that were very geometric. There are beautiful aesthetics within the devastation. The frame within a frame element from missing windows became interesting and I moved position to square my frame and also position elements within the background of the window frame. I then had to deal with depth of field and focus issues often making numerous exposures with different focal points.
Documentary photographers photograph in a similar ways as Press photographers and Photojournalists but there are differences. The Press photographer and Photojournalists are looking for impactful images that either complement or tell the story like documentary photographers do but they have more constraints. They have less time, and their image needs to stand out in a way to quickly grab the viewers’ attention and to focus their attention directly on the subject. As a documentary photographer I don’t have a deadline, I can revisit things again and again. I can craft images with layers of detailed information because the goal for me is to share my photographs in settings where people have time to explore the image for all the information in the image. Any type of photographer can and should be respectful when photographing subject matter like this. I have had lots of positive interactions with people while photographing in Altadena because I explain my connection to the community and I am respectful of other peoples’ property. I just felt it was important to author a post about this subject because I don’t want anyone to misjudge my intentions with this portfolio. Foremost my goal is to document the devastation, so society never forgets the impact this fire had on thousands of people.
Example Images below:
Frames within the Frame:
Branches:
Rust:
Self Portrait - January 14th, 2025 Documenting the Eaton Fire on Del Rey in Pasadena
In today’s world there are people who are triggered when they think a photographer might be about to photograph them or their property. People can be suspicious, angry, confrontational, and feel they have a right to absolute privacy wherever they go and that photographers don’t have a right to photograph anything in public view without permission. Many of these same people also are completely comfortable with having government traffic cameras monitoring them as they drive through town, or stores capturing facial recognition when they shop, or having their selfie images flung far and wide on the internet. I always try to be respectful to others but I won’t sacrifice my First Amendment rights because someone has feelings which are not congruent with the law.
I have not had any problems photographing the devastation caused by the Eaton Fire, but I have been questioned more than once about what I was doing, and I am fine with that. People in the burn area have been victims of looting and souvenir hunters, and it is good people to watch out for their neighborhood. Soon after the fire I had business cards made with images of the fire on them and links to my website. When people ask what I am doing I introduce myself, explain that I was born and raised in the area, I talk about the importance of documenting the event, and I give them a business card so they can check out my photographs. Once people understood who I am and why I am photographing I never had a problem. I often end up in long conversations with these people as they are happy to tell someone their story. A lot of people in the burn areas are hurting and need someone to listen to them. A sad thing I have heard on a couple occasions were stories about outside people visiting the area to sightsee the damage and removing artifacts from homes, people’s property, as if they were souvenirs from the trip.
I often photograph from the street and when I do move in I walk in on lawns, pathways, or driveways. Since most the houses in the area were built on raised foundations with hard wood floors it is too dangerous go on to the debris where I have no idea about the depth or the dangers of the materials underneath me. The best photographs have been from the outside looking in too. I don’t move or take items I just photograph what I see, searching out the best composition of the item. If a lot has caution tape or no trespassing signs up I respect them and don’t go past them.
The process of photographing in the Eaton Fire area is unlike anything else I have photographed once I got past the initial part of the flames. It is slightly like my Cemetery Portfolio with static graphic elements which I can photograph from numerous angles and return to rephotograph at different times to get the exact light I am looking for. The only pressure I have had is when the cleanup started I ended up in a race with the Army Corps of Engineers to get my images before they levelled up all the lots.
The weight of these images is heavier than most anything I have ever photographed, the only thing harder I can really think of was photographing Officer Russ Miller’s funeral in 2000 because he was a close friend. The closeness of the subject matter is really similar and it may be harder because this area is where I grew up and our childhood memories are often some of the strongest we have. I definitely feel the loss and grief every time I am photographing up there.
I have always loathed press photographers who put on a long lens to capture someone’s tears at a time of loss. We all know what loss is like, for me those images can sometimes feel exploitative. I can envision some press photographers proud to have “gotten the shot” while not really considering what the person in their frame is dealing with. Something which really separates me with this portfolio is I don’t have to move on to the next story, I am staying there in my neighborhood with these people. It’s weird sometimes how draining making five hundred exposures over a few hours up there can be. Especially when I travel to someplace like Chicago, I can easily capture 10x thar many images in a weekend and feel great. The drive to work on the Eaton Portfolio is strong, almost a little addictive and that includes all the postproduction tasks.
I almost feel guided at times with this portfolio as if it has been assigned to me. I am also finding things to photograph which I can’t explain how I found them, and I am capturing amazing images in poor lighting conditions. I am working methodically and with good equipment, but it is more than that.
I found it interesting that several people were willing to talk with me for a few minutes about their loss but declined to let me photograph them.
This post is long, but I felt I needed to speak about ethics related to the Eaton Fire Portfolio somewhere on my website and do so now. There are people in today’s world who love to challenge the intentions of others, often anonymously, and I wanted to be proactive explaining why I am photographing in Altadena and hopefully limit any misconceptions in the future.
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As an additional exercise I asked the Chatbot of Britannica: What are the ethics of photography and got the following:
Source: Britannica (5)
The ethics of photography involve considerations of objectivity, manipulation, privacy, and social impact. Ethical standards in photography are essential to maintaining trust and promoting responsible practices.
Key Ethical Considerations
Objectivity vs. Manipulation Photography has long been considered an objective medium, accurately recording reality. However, digital technologies allow for easy manipulation of images, blurring the line between reality and fabrication. Photojournalists and documentarians have reacted cautiously to digital imaging, with journalistic codes of ethics established to regulate the alteration of digital images.
Privacy and Harassment Paparazzi methods have led to claims of privacy invasion and harassment, especially concerning celebrities. Legislation exists to regulate paparazzi behavior, stipulating that they may be prosecuted if they threaten, stalk, intimidate, or cause distress to their subjects.
Social Impact and Documentation Photography's power to persuade and inform has led to social documentation, capturing theoretically objective descriptions and arousing sympathy. Social documentation can be used to examine contemporary society, but it can also be falsified for dramatic effect.
Civil Liberties The expansion of photography into surveillance and facial recognition technologies has intensified debates about its impact on civil liberties.
Ethical Principles
Fundamentally, ethical photography should adhere to principles of honesty, respect, and responsibility. It is critical to avoid manipulating images in ways that distort the truth, to respect individuals' privacy, and to consider the potential social impact of photographic work. Upholding these principles is essential for maintaining the integrity and trustworthiness of photography as a medium.
Britannica also stated Ethics is defined in the discipline concerned with what is morally good and bad and morally right and wrong. The term is also applied to any system or theory of moral values or principles.
AI gave a pretty concise and detailed explanation covering most the issues of ethics related to photography.
CHI DSC_6274_ 03-26-2024 - Laureen V. Connelly with her Cook County Assessor’s Office Certificate of Retirement plaque documenting 25 years of service.
Both of my kids played travel ice hockey growing up. It was time consuming and expensive, but it was some of the best times of our lives. A nice biproduct of them playing was I got back to the East Coast a lot and was able to photograph and see lots of amazing exhibitions. My daughter now lives in Chicago after getting her master’s degree from Northwestern and she started playing hockey again last year with joining a women’s league. When her team qualified for the payoffs, she told me that I needed to come back to see her play again. The last time I had been in Chicago was March of 2020 when I was driving across country with her brother trying to outrun the pandemic shutdown of the country. I acknowledged I was long overdue to visit so I agreed to a long weekend. The playoffs were up near Madison, Wisconsin but I was able to bookend days around the tournament to get three days to photograph in Chicago, museum hop, and eat at my favorite restaurants.
Chicago has been my favorite city to visit since I first went there in 1987 to photograph Wrigley Field, before they installed the light. I have been to Chicago at least twenty-five now. Chicago became our go to vacation spot, it was an easy flight, there was lots to do, and we just liked the city. Chicago had everything a big city should have but there is a Midwest atmosphere which is just nice. It is an amazing sports town, the museums are amazing, and the city has the best steaks of anywhere in the world.
Photographing on the street in Chicago is amazing I always find good images there. Like in New York there are usually lots of people walking about the city and there is plenty of interaction which usually adds layers of meaning to an image. I have also found that most of the time I have been in Chicago the quality of light in Chicago has been outstanding, which is not the case other places. I think part of it has to do with the way the streets are laid out, there is more room between the buildings there than most cities. I think part of that is by design since architectural design is so important in the city and there may have been a conscious plan to allow some buildings to have room around them to be showcased. The Chicago River and lake front also allow more light to fall in the city. The beauty of the architecture in Chicago is also lends itself to more interesting backgrounds of images. I also think the way some of the buildings are constructed that they improve the bounce light. The city also has that Midwest atmosphere most places which is nice. Michigan Avenue is a wide street with wide sidewalks and planter boxes; the street was designed for shoppers and heavy pedestrian traffic. With Michigan Avenue’s sidewalks being so wide not only does that allow more light into the area but it also has always given me room to maneuver and get in position to frame my images better than anywhere else. I have become so familiar and comfortable with the city I always do well with a camera there.
It was amazing on this trip in March how quickly I was back in the zone while photographing on the street. At times it felt like images were coming to me and I wasn’t having to search as hard as I do in Los Angeles sometimes. I especially found that interesting because I spent more time on this trip than ever before photographing South of the river, especially around Daly Square where I don’t usually go.
My Chicago portfolio is special to me, and I envision having an impact on others in book form and as part of a permanent collection. The Chicago Historical Society already has some of my photographs in their collection and hopefully I can find more homes in the city for my work soon.
This trip also inspired me to start digitizing more Chicago negatives and I have added some of those recently scanned images to my Chicago Portfolio here on my website.
Below are some of the images from my March 2024 trip:
CHI DSC 3029 3-22-24 “Untitled” (Wells & Wacher, Chicago)
When I got back from Chicago in March and started going through all my images I came across this photograph above. At first glance I saw how the elements in the frame were interesting, and I understood how I was drawn to make the exposure. But when I zoomed in, I immediately realized that the little girl in the stroller looked so similar to my daughter Alyssa at that age and that reminded me how often we used to take her to Chicago for vacations. The little girl in the stroller is so alert to the world around her just like Alyssa was at that age. I am assuming it was seeing the stuffed animal in the girl’s arm that really made the connection. The girl is clutching it in such a protective way, you know how special the toy is for her. My daughter was exactly the same way, and that period of innocence was so wonderful. The image brought to mind how much a parent tries and protect their children when they are young and also how in today’s society I still worry about my adult children’s safety as crime and world tensions rise. Viewing this image became an incredibly intense experience rather quickly as I realized everything I just mentioned, and I was not expecting that. The experience motivated me to revisit my negatives and see what images I had of Alyssa when we would take her Chicago when she was young. Below is one of my Chicago photographs from 25 years ago when Alyssa two years old.
CHI-171 #29 5-03-99 - Alyssa Valentine at the Hancock Tower
I don’t know if there is too much more to say about these images or the recent experience. I don’t want to make it into something more than it is, but I thought there was value in sharing how I felt with people interested in my work or just interested a photographer’s process. I think it not only gives insight to the fact I am an admitted romantic, but it also highlights how a photograph can evoke strong emotions from the image maker even when that was not the original intent. I know everyone brings their own experiences with them when they view an image and that people often have different responses to images based on their own prior experiences. I also want to point out that images can become more important overtime and develop new layers of meaning particularly if public opinion of the subject matter changes or if the subject matter documents change in and of itself. Viewers opinions can also change over time as they have different experiences with the same image. These are all some of the reasons why I don’t delete image files or purge old negatives.
My museum guide for the day, Alyssa
On this trip to Chicago, I was lucky enough to see the Picasso: Drawing from Life exhibition before it closed on April 8th. I always enjoy seeing the works of the great artists up close, so I can inspect their craftsmanship detail. Experiencing well-crafted artwork always makes you better at your own craft regardless of if their medium is the same or different as yours.
The curators designed this exhibition to examine the people in Pablo Picasso’s life who supported him as he developed as an artist. It considers his artist network, the art dealers who promoted his work, the printers who crafted his editions, his family and friends, as well as his lovers. The exhibition is centered on his works on paper to tell this story. The exhibition illustrated how Picasso needed this support network to achieve the prominence he gained in his career.
The exhibition is arranged chronologically and showcases over 60 of his works to illustrate Picasso’s incredible 70-year career. It was incredible to consider all the world events that occurred during the period in which Picasso lived and how they impacted his works.
I loved drawing as a child, my mom knew how important it was to be creative while developing, but I have never been satisfied with my drawing or art skills. I always wanted to be more accurate like several of my talented friends were. I assume that desire to better with a pencil or brush may have helped influence me becoming a photographer. I loved seeing the artist’s had in this work above, Seated Female Nude - Sumer 1909, I was probably drawn to the detail with this work more than the whole image.
The lithograph above, Paloma and Her Doll on a Black Background, got my attention because I was interested in how he documented his feelings for his daughter for his daughter with it as well as the innocence element of Paloma’s relationship with her doll. As today’s world gets more tense, I have paid more attention to examples of the innocence of youth and their fragility. It is deeper than I want to go in to here, but this print had an impact.
I loved seeing this drawing Six Busts of Women because I was able to spend so much time on the trip photographing the actual statue in Daley Square. For all the time I have spent in Chicago I have never explored Daley Square before as much as I did on this trip. Loved learning more about the subject matter in my photographs from there.
Below are more random selections of works in the exhibition. I truly appreciate Pablo Picasso’s work, especially how he worked with so many different materials and was not afraid to explore with his creativity.
The Art Institutes copy of the famous Picasso etching Minotauimachia (Above)
In honor of Picasso’s titling style (maybe his dealer Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler handled the titles since so many are obvious descriptions of the work, seemingly assigned for record keeping purposes) I title my photograph below: My Daughter Alyssa by sign for the Picasso Exhibition at the Chicago Art Institute.
I was finally able to get up to Ave Pildas’s home, and studio, in Santa Monica a few weeks ago for a long overdue visit to talk about photography and some potential collaborations we are considering.
Ave designed their house and the garage (studio space) he shares with his wife Phyllis Green. It is an incredible property, perfect for a creative couple. Hopefully one day Ave does a documentary film or some reels where he showcases his space, I know a lot of people would enjoy seeing it as I did.
It was good for me to compare Ave’s studio and workspace to my own. For people who are not creative an artist’s world is a hard thing to understand, especially how artists organize things to allow for free-flowing creativity (in my case it is how I navigate my clutter). Ave’s studio design is a unique space well designed for him and Phyllis. While we were upstairs in his office looking at prints and talking, Phyllis was on her side utilizing her large worktables to create a three-dimensional project involving hats. It was fantastic how the space was both separate and connected at the same time.
Ave shared prints from his Circles Squares and Triangles portfolio and explained that photographing three-dimensional items in his studio to create images was how he kept being creative through the lockdown part of the pandemic.
Ave also gave me copies of his Nude(s) and Circles Squares and Triangles books. I have several other titles from his Small Books titles which I first discovered at Arcana Books in Culver City. These small self-published projects are fantastic. He uses El Sereno Graphics in Los Angeles to print them, and they are some of the nicest looking books I have seen in this size and unit cost. I had wanted to get this post done last week to showcase the photograph the image “Valentine” below from his Nude(s) book for Valentine’s Day, but unfortunately, I am way behind on things right now.
I encourage everyone to check out Ave’s books and his work. I am jealous of the volume of material he has photographed in his lifetime and the fact he is still out there travelling the world looking for new images. I am really enjoying our friendship and I will continue showcasing his work whenever I can.