Celebrity Portraits Fashion Flair Digital Freedom
Transcription
Celebrity Portraits Fashion Flair Digital Freedom
. 3/2003 $4.95 A Cygnus Publication © JERRY AVENAIM www.spdonline.com Celebrity Portraits Fashion Flair Digital Freedom . contents MARCH 2003 VOLUME 6/ISSUE 3 page 14 Absolutely Avenaim BY ALICE B. MILLER JERRY AVENAIM Delights and Disarms His Megastars page 20 Digital Surrealism BY MISSY HARRIS CARL ZAPP’s Iconic Images page 24 Life, Only Better BY ERIN HARRINGTON-PLONSKI DAN LIM’s Creative Interactions 14 20 © JERRY AVENAIM © CARL ZAPP 24 © DAN LIM 3/2003 studio photography & design 3 Absolutely Avenaim Jerry Avenaim Delights and Disarms His Megastars TEXT BY ALICE B. MILLER • IMAGES BY JERRY AVENAIM 14 studio photography & design 3/2003 j erry Avenaim’s faces are everywhere. Halle Berry. Helen Hunt. Mel Gibson. Dr. Phil McGraw. Angela Bassett. Patricia Arquette. Brooke Shields. Julia Roberts. Winning the trust of some of the brightest stars, Avenaim has a client roster that reads like a “Who’s Who of Hollywood.” After more than a decade of shooting glamorous portraits of the famous and infamous, Avenaim’s images have graced major magazines worldwide, including Vogue, GQ, Glamour, Vanity Fair, InStyle, and Newsweek. Commercial clients include Merle Norman Cosmetics, Phat Farm, Guess, Durasoft contact lenses, Pella Windows, Fox, and Warner Bros. EASY DOES IT AT WARP SPEED In only a fraction of the time movie directors have to capture the mood or look they’re after, Avenaim artfully brings out the vulnerability and humanity of his stars. His tools of the trade: Flexibility, consistency, technical mastery, and the ability to perform under pressure to get that iconic image. “As artists, we have to take chances to make memorable images,” he says. “Not everything goes the way you originally envisioned it and that’s a beautiful part of the creative process. The key is to be prepared for anything that may arise. By being malleable, you often get gems you hadn’t planned on. I try to set an easy, relaxed atmosphere for celebrities and their publicists. It's important to have a sense of humor and be truly engaging with the person I'm photographing. To make people laugh with an impersonation or story almost always puts them at ease. But at the end of the day, trust is what’s paramount in photographing celebrities.” His photo sessions with Angela Bassett and Helen Hunt give us a sense of the ease and flexibility that flow at his star shoots. “Angela Bassett is an amazing spirit,” he says. “We were almost finished shooting when I got the idea to pour milk over her (p.14). She said sure. I had my assistant go to the studio kitchen and get all the milk, a pan, and a broom handle. With the pan taped to the handle, he stood over Angela on a 12-foot ladder waiting for my cue. I told her to scream when the milk came pouring down. It wasn’t until the milk lay still, with a few drops flowing down her face, that I felt this peace about the image we had created.” His experience with Helen Hunt is equally as collaborative. “She reminds me of a vintage Hollywood star.” She is blessed with talent, a kind heart, and a classic beauty. I envisioned Helen in the glory days of Bette Davis and Katherine Hepburn, which inspired the retro look (p.16). I rented a peach ‘57 Thunderbird, and shot in the courtyard of the infamous Chateaux Marmont hotel on Sunset Blvd. Open-minded and willing to contribute ideas of her own, she was never afraid to take a chance. It was one of the most enjoyable times I’d ever spent on a shoot.” And then there’s Halle Berry, our cover star. His from top: Brooke Shields in between takes for Durasoft contact lenses; Jada Pinkett-Smith, Vogue et al.; Rod Steiger, Newsweek Shaquille O’Neal, personal work, children’s book Shaq and the Beanstalk 3/2003 studio photography & design 15 from top: Carre Otis, Grace magazine; Dr. Phil, Newsweek cover; Helen Hunt in retro 50s fashion, Rolling Stone 16 studio photography & design 3/2003 encounters with her are golden. “While Halle is an extremely approachable star, superstardom has its price and for her it means time has become a luxurious commodity in short supply. Because she began her career as a model, Halle is very comfortable in front of a still camera and needed very little direction. Celebrities always walk in the door with clean hair and clean face, to give the makeup artist a clean canvas. “Halle knew we were there to do beauty shots and didn’t require lots of direction. Once or twice I yelled from behind the camera if I needed a shoulder to come over a bit or to get a full smile. Five rolls of film and 15 minutes later, we were finished and the look was pure Halle—gorgeous and approachable.” Since that shoot in late 2002, magazines from around the world have picked up Avenaim’s Berry images, including Ebony, Woman, German Premier, the 2003 People yearbook (cover), and now SP&D. impression she’s on a pedestal. Just before press time, in early February, Avenaim shot a 16-page editorial on 8X10 Polaroid for Angeleno magazine’s April issue. (See p. 17 for a peek at one of the fashion article’s images.) “What I love about 8X10 is the discipline it requires, from me and my subjects. Because the image is composed upsidedown and the film holder is then placed in the camera, you can’t see what you’re doing through a viewfinder. Since it costs about $50 a sheet, I can’t just hold Polaroid image from 16-page fashion spread in April 2003 Angelino down the button on a magazine motor drive and TECHNICAL MASTERY hope one comes out right.” That shoot, as much as any other, ZugaPhoto.TV, a website dedicatdemanded lighting mastery as well ed to photography education, as lightning-quick skills to get it which debuted at the end of done in an especially period winFebruary, filmed the shoot. Monte dow of time. Zucker captured Avenaim signing Avenaim is a masterful techniMarch SP&D cover blowups at the cian who knows his equipment Cygnus Business Media booth durand how to get the results he’s ing PMA for website download. after. The Halle Berry shoot is a case in point. Devoted to his Mamiya RZ67 system, he fitted his main Profoto head with an 11-inch silver parabolic reflector, mounted on a Bogen boom. It was covered with four sheets of Rosco Tuff Spun for diffusion, one of which was soaked in Lipton tea to warm the color temperature of the light. This is what gave her skin tone a glow he has not been able to achieve with filters. Between the key light and Halle was a black Matthew’s flag, feathering the light gently from her forehead. His main light was five feet from her and the flag was about two feet away from her forehead. The camera angle was about chest height to give the THE BUSINESS OF BEING Avenaim goes over every detail with the editor days before a shoot, making sure everything is secure— the studio, location, permits, equipment. Then his assistants doublecheck him. “Be prepared or be prepared to fail,” he says. His website is a big help with overseas clients or when a portfolio isn’t readily available. It’s also been great for commissioned work. “In addition to printed promotional material, I recently started an email promo campaign,” says Avenaim. “Spamming turns a client or prospect off in a heartbeat, so my emails are personal and tailored to each individual.” Then either his agent, Wendy Schneider, or Avenaim follows up with a phone call. “You have to be tenacious but not pushy. It’s a fine line we walk.” As a catharsis, he focuses on soul-cleansing personal works, including three books: Naked Truth, Kindred Spirits, and a how-to book on photography. He’s also begun to enjoy lecturing. “I was recently a guest at an L.A. workshop. We had fun debating intellectual property law and my style of lighting and metering a white seamless setup. Can you think of a better way to spend a Saturday night? My beautiful wife can.” Absolutely Avenaim . . . ❖ JERRY AVENAIM’S GEAR BOX 35MM CAMERAS Contax TVS (for snapshots) Canon EOS-1N MEDIUM-FORMAT CAMERAS Mamiya RZ67 Pro II system Pentax 6x7 bodies for mobility Hasselblad 6x6 and Contax 645 (both rented) LARGE-FORMAT CAMERA Linhof 4x5 Kardan with Schneider lenses Sinar 8x10 (rented) DIGITAL CAMERAS Canon G2 (for snapshots and castings) Canon EOS D60 Higher-end cameras & backs (rented as needed) SPECIALTY CAMERAS Rolleiflex 2.8F TLR with Zeiss optics and Rollinar filters Polaroid 180 with Portrait kit FILM Kodak EPP, E200, Portra LIGHTING Speedotron packs with 102 heads, Chimera softboxes, Mole Richardson 2K Juniors, Lowel DP kit, Profoto, Elinchron Octolight & Kinoflo (all rented) COMPUTER/PRODUCTION Macintosh G4 towers Post production: Bowhaus Retouching: D Space /Tracy Bayne Color labs: Fleshtone, ICON B&W labs: Photo Impact, Nardulli, and Silverlab 3/2003 studio photography & design 17