November 11, 2009

Cultural Nostalgia

Frame of MindPhotography by Paul Cabanis.

Los Angeles feels like the Mid-Century capital of the world. Expressions of Post War optimism, modernism, futurism and a burgeoning mid-century identity don’t just linger on, they flourish. These photographs, shot in 2008, with an Olympus Pen EE (1961) half frame camera and using out of date film, feel particulary appropriate. The merging of dated technology with a hint of an adopted reminiscence combine to deliver this wafting sense of 1960’s cultural nostalgia. And all the more fitting as the Olympus Pen EE was the first camera to introduce automatic exposure; great pictures, guaranteed, with just the push of a button.

A real point and shooter, just like Paul.

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October 9, 2009

Intimate India _ 2

Point of View, Photography by Paul Cabanis

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September 2, 2009

What has happened to me? he thought.

The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka
Photography by Paul Cabanis
Montage by Nancy Cantwell
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August 21, 2009

Quotidian Los Angeles

Quotidian Los Angeles, maybe a bit undone. Dingbats and Mid-Century endure in a poetic, defiant state of the remiss. Nothing apocalyptic, more poised as a silent reclamation of purpose. Photography by Paul Cabanis.

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July 24, 2009

Intimate India

Quotidian photography by Paul Cabanis. India 2008. Cabanis, who travels often in India, gives us evocative, familiar insights. No longer tethered to nor compelled to seek the remarkable, these photographs instead, offer up an intimate conversation. Here asylum is at hand, automobiles possess a bovine nature and technology is on pause. What is “Cyclostyling’?

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April 3, 2009

A Shimmer of Possibility

“a shimmer of possibility: Photographs by Paul Graham” is on view through May 18 at the Museum of Modern Art. I had been unaware of his body of work before I read this review in the NYTimes and being very intrigued decided to rectify that circumstance. After spending some time on Paul Graham’s site I am now excited by the non-linear approach of his books, an strategy he calls “filmic Haiku”. His work bypasses mere road work documentation and pursues vernacular accidents to “replicate the episodic, Chekhovian experience”.
Fine Deal!

So I passed these treasures onto my friend Paul Cabanis whose work has quite a similar bend. Paul doesn’t oft answer my emails with more than one word responses, but this time he spent some time in crafting a response. I knew I had a co-conspirator at hand.

Here is Paul’s List, in order of preference:
The Great NorthRoad
End of an Age
Troubled Land
Television Portraits
Beyond Caring

Here is Nancy’s list, in order of preference: 
Ceasefire
The Great NorthRoad
New Europe
Television Portaits
Shimmer of Posibility

Here is my favorite shot from his New Europe, 1986-1982. It says everything to be said about “waiting”. ne31.jpg
Here is my second favorite shot from his A1-The Great North Road 1981-1982. I feel like its Alice looking back through the mirror to the last century. Will this photograph hold up in the long run? Will it become some specific irony or will it tell a more commanding story? In all  fairness, to isolate a picture from a Paul Graham “short story” is silly. But still, I am seduced. a1-29.jpg
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February 24, 2009

Paul

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Paul Cabanis 2008 – IPhone Photography

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