In the beginning of the BUSH era I was in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. I still can’t believe I was there on September 11.
But this is not about 9/11. I remember an old friend and co-worker — as we were trying to make sense of the tragedy of that day — talk to me about the world’s future and my place in it as a graphic designer and photographer in Riyadh. He told me that his father asked him every single day “Son, is that job that making you happy? Is it contributing to the society and the world? Does your life have meaning or purpose?”
The only thing I remember answering back, while we were watching people jumping off the World Trade Center Tower that day was…
– “I want to write about this”
Nine years later my screenplay is still in the shelf — unfinished. But that day made me realize that my life could so easily become superficial. And I wanted to find my life’s purpose in a language I could understand.
I am a fashion photographer now. I’ve always admired those who live their life changing the world in ways that work for them. They make me feel shallow and insignificant — so I am taking writing classes, despite the fact that English is not my first language. I’m taking steps to organize my thoughts and write about things that I care and am passionate about. Taking portraits of a person or a model is somehow telling a story too but I want to write as much as I want to read good books and watch good films. In the capitalist world where I make a living, writing keeps me grounded.
One of the most grounded icons in the “fashion house” died at the aged of 92 yesterday in his Manhattan home. These words were written in his obituary: “Irving Penn, A courtly man whose gentle demeanor masked an intense perfectionism, Mr. Penn adopted the pose of a humble craftsman while helping to shape a field known for putting on airs. Although schooled …in painting and design, he chose to define himself as a photographer, scraping his early canvases of paint so that they might serve a more useful life as backdrops to his pictures.”
He is a true photography icon minus the diva tendencies and superficialness that plague fashion today. It always amazes me to meet or read about “real” people in the industry. I meet and read about today’s top photographers and I feel like they are either junkies or Britney Spears wannabes. And every time you mention this to them, you are met with defensiveness and are discredited as bitter. These days, you can count with one hand the genuinely intelligent and grounded creatives.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irving_Penn)
Irving Penn studied under Alexey Brodovitch at the Philadelphia Museum School from wh
ich he graduated 1938. Penn’s drawings were published by Harper’s Bazaar and he also painted. As his career in photography blossomed, he became known for post World War II feminine chic and glamour photography. Clarity, composition, careful arrangement of objects or people, form, and the use of light characterize Penn’s work. Penn also photographs still life objects and found objects in unusual arrangements with great detail and clarity.
His still life compositions are skillfully arranged assemblages of food or objects; at once spare and highly organized, the objects are raised to a graphic perfection, articulating the abstract interplay of line and volume.
Looking at Penn’s life and work, I could see he contributed wholeheartedly his visions of beauty and history to the the world — inspiring thousands of younger generations of photographers like me to be a storyteller like him.
Thank you
Mr. Penn
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