Thursday, February 28, 2019

Submitted Work To The Washington Post

Just did up a submission (while working days in the guard shack!!) to the Washington Post and their "In Sight" photography section. Hopefully they will publish the work, which would raise awareness and help for the families at the dump.

Here is the little straight forward blurb that I sent them, and the 20 images I submitted. Also sent them a bunch of links.

"Families of the Dump" details the lives of Burmese refugees (mostly Karen and Mon ethnic groups) who live and work the Mae Sot Thailand garbage dump. I have been photographing and doing donation work with them (donating headlamps, rubber boots, medicines, school supplies, rice along with lollipops and other treats for the children) for 5 years. The family members have become my friends. We work together to make their lives better. I make the photographs, people in Canada and the USA see the photos, donate money and then I return to continue making more pictures and spending the donation money wisely. In Canada I work as a security guard, YAUM means security guard in the Thai language, my real name is ----- --------- , I prefer to put the Yaum name on photo things, this is not about me. There are hundreds of write ups about "Families of the Dump" on my blog page. Please see the links if you have time. 

Thank you 

"Families of the Dump" Back Story
Washington Post "In Sight" Submission Form

"Families of the dump, 2016
"Families of the dump, 2015
"Families of the dump, 2015
"Families of the dump, 2016
"Families of the dump, 2015
"Families of the dump, 2015
"Families of the dump, 2016
"Families of the dump, 2015
"Families of the dump, 2016
"Families of the dump, 2013
"Families of the dump, 2013
"Families of the dump, 2013
"Families of the dump, 2013
"Families of the dump, 2013
"Families of the dump, 2013
"Families of the dump, 2013
"Families of the dump, 2013
"Families of the dump, 2013
"Families of the dump, 2013
"Families of the dump, 2015

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

"KANATA", HF3535 Update At Large Format Photography Forum

Yesterday, I had a person on the large format photography forum ask me for an update on my HF3535 camera post and photography project. Seems a few people there are intrigued by the camera and the planned wet plate project. Here is the long reply I wrote up today.

Note* Earlier when asking tech questions about lens on www.largeformatphotography.info, I had posted several comments about the large 35x35 inch view camera I was buying and about "KANATA" the major cross Canada photography project I was planning.

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Hi…… ……. Thank you for your interest in the HF3535 project. Today I am working an OT security guard dayshift here in Canada, something I hate but need to do to let a coworker have a short vacation. To help me get through this rather long-difficult day I decided to answer your email here at work. It is fun to dream and talk photo things when your stranded in a guardhouse in snowy, cold Edmonton. So here it goes, my long winded answer to your simple question.

The HF3535 camera and the photo project “KANATA” is very slowly coming together. “Kanata” is the name of the wet plate series I am planning to do with the camera, it will probably take over 10 years to complete. Kanata is an indigenous Canadian word meaning "village" or "settlement". It is the origin of the name of Canada. The eventual photos could include landscapes and portraits shot across the country. The pictures would be made using cameras from 4x5 to 35x35 and be done both in negative form and using the wet plate collodion process (ambrotypes). I am 54 years old now, the plan would be get going on things by about 57 or so, and seriously do the photography after I retire from my security gig between ages 60 and 70, health permitting. It is all a long shot. It is sort of an impossible thing to achieve.  I figure thou anything can be done, as long as you try. So we will try and see how it all fills out in the end. I will do my best and go from there. If I fail, I fail. Better to go down swinging at the plate, than not trying at all.

On the camera: I am still waiting for it! It is now over a year late. I have been told thou that the work continues and that it is coming along slowly. I find the delay frustrating but hopefully in the end I will get the camera as promised. The builder injured his hand a while back which put everything off course. I have 2 lens for the camera, will have plate holders made soon. I am trying to figure out the tripod – mounting the camera in the field set up (with some suggestions from ULF wet plate photog Kurt Moser, met him in Italy in 2018, saw his work, darkroom etc. An amazing artist and human being). The darkroom trailer plan is slowly developing as well. I am picking up a used double plastic laundry sink for it this weekend. I plan on using the sink in a small trailer I will buy in the next year or so (6x10 foot).  Will pull the smaller trailer behind my camper van to start things out. Later on I might get a larger RV unit and a larger trailer. Will see about that later, if the early work is successful.

My battle plan for the project is as follows…this is from a blog I wrote a few days ago.


Because I am new to wet plate I need to learn the process, to learn the process I need to start out slow. I also need to spend my money wisely and slowly climb the mountain top. Part of that climb is to buy Quinn Jacobson’s latest book-video series that he recently completed.


Of late I have been working on a second darkroom space. This darkroom will allow me to do wet plate in it as well as Platinum-Palladium printing.


I also picked up an old Petzval brass lens recently to use with a 8x10 camera for the project. The first few years I expect to shoot the 8x10 and maybe the 16x20 Chaminox Camera. The HF3535 will need to wait for now.


On a side note I have been  heavily involved in my “Families of the Dump” project. In 2017-2018 I spent 6 months in Thailand making pictures at the dump and doing donation work there. We (I) handed out over $4000 in goods, head lamps, boots, rice, medicines to those in need. Have become deeply involved with the families in the dump, many people there have become my friends. I need to complete my work with them before diving head first into “Kanata”. You can see some of that on the links.

Recent exhibition and newspaper story about the project…


Some of the b/w film photos shot between 2013 and 2016 (including using a 5x7 view camera)


Some of the color photos from 2017-2018


Here is a video shot last year of me arriving on a rented motorbike in the dump to hand out things to the people there. Also of course did a night of photography afterwards. Spent a total of about 4 months in the dump, rented a room in town etc. Lots of effort, got sick in the end but was a very positive life altering type experience. I can still see the smiling children who we gave SOLO (Lollipops) to. See the video here:


I will return to the dump and the families in May of 2019. We raised another $1110 to help them. The money is from 2 artist talks I gave as well as from private donators who have been following this work. Basically the way it works is people have seen the photos, heard my stories and gave money without me asking for money. Social documentary photography can be an important vessel for change, help make the world a little bit of a better place (at least that is my dream). I hope the HF3535 “KANATA” project will also have a positive effect on peoples lives.

So in summary, busy with lots of other stuff and slowly getting things lined up for the “KANATA” and using the HF3535 camera. Keep tuned more to come. This might all blow up in my face yet, nothing may come of it, or maybe like with the Families of the Dump pics or with the sex worker 8x10 portraits (https://slate.com/culture/2014/01/gerry-yaum-photographs-sex-workers-in-pattaya-thailand-in-his-exhibition-body-sellers-the-sex-workers-of-thailand-at-photonola.html), things might still work out. Sometimes when you dive into the deep end you do learn how to swim! Hopefully I will not drown! Thanks for your kind interest.

Hope that helps update things as they currently stand. Thanks also for helping me make a mundane morning as a guard a bit more exciting. “Ain’t Photography Grand!!”

Gerry

Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Trailer Darkroom Sink

I am starting to prepare for my mobile darkroom trailer build. This trailer will be used as part of my eventual major wet plate project "KANATA". Today I found a sink and made a deal on it. The sink retails on Home Depot new for $199. I got mine off Kijiji for $80. Will pick up my new working tool this coming weekend. Eventually I plan on buying a small 6x10 foot utility trailer to install this baby in. :) Got to plan ahead baby!

The lighter weight of the plastic versus a metal sink-cabinet set up should also help with the overall weight of the trailer and the corresponding amount of gas I will use up hauling this thing cross country. I will have to attach it to the trailer floor somehow and also rig up plumbing to it, just in case I can access outside water lines-sewage. If I am running the darkroom in the open field (more likely) I will run the waste water into a storage tank and get my running water from camping style bottled water containers.

Hope this thing works for me, I think it should.

My new-used darkroom trailer sink

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Facebook: 228lbs

The slow steady weight lost continues. Last time I weighed myself 1 month ago I was at 233lbs, down from 250lbs in December. Today I weigh 228lbs. My original goal was 225 lbs (am 6 foot 2.5 inches), but will now try to reach 220lbs or a bit lower before I depart to Thailand in May.
At 54 years of age, working under a burning sun, in a garbage dump, carrying camera gear and heavy things like rice and rubber boots, I needed to lose some poundage. Things are looking positive and slowly changing. My weight loss is mostly the result of watching what I eat, counting calories, and a bit of exercise (need to up the BIT part). 

Like always, everything positive that happens in my life has a direct connection to photography. Got to love it!

Am excited about the coming 7 week Thai trip, more photos, more adventures, more positive memories and another $1110 CAD to hand out in goods to the families who work the garbage.

Here is a selection of "Families of the Dump" photos, taken from 2013 to 2016. If I am repeat posting some of these sorry about that, just at work (security guard nights in Canada), making do with what I can find online.

Hope to turn some of these type images into Platinum-Palladium prints in the coming years. That is the main reason I put together the darkroom #2 (recent posts).

"Families of the Dump" 2016---working the garbage.

"Families of the Dump" 2015----Young Nui Ooh.

"Families of the Dump" 2016--young boy with Thanaka on face in his family shack.

"Families of the Dump" 2016--second family boy.
"Families of the Dump" 2015----Family in their home.
"Families of the Dump" 2013---New family, boys sleeping on the garbage.
"Families of the Dump" 2013---oldest family daughter.
"Families of the Dump" 2013---mother feeding her young boy between garbage truck work sessions.

"Families of the Dump" 2013---pouting.

"Families of the Dump" 2013 --- found book.

Cameras To Take To Thai?

I plan on taking 2 or 3 Lecia 35mm cameras with me next trip to Thai. Am also thinking of taking one more camera system with me. Which? I need to figure out the story I want to tell and how I want to show it.

- Canon 5D Mark 3? (ringflash? or surround softbox set up?)
- Polaroid 4x5 conversion camera "Bananarama"
- Mamiya 6x9 camera (35mm on steroids).
- Hasselblad with wide angle lens
- Rolleiflex
- 4x5 Linhoff

Thursday, February 14, 2019

"KANATA" Battle Plan

Been thinking a lot lately about the best way to proceed with my planned future cross Canada wet plate project "KANATA". I need to get not only a wet plate trailer of some kind, it is important I also have a large motorhome type vehicle to live in. What type of trailer and motorhome get thou? How to proceed?

The problem of course is money. I might be able to get some kind of Art Grants to pursue this idea, I might be able to teach wet plate photo classes across the  country, I might also be able to sell some work or get artist fees in galleries that show the work. A fund raising program? There are many ways to fund things like this. Those are all unknowns and all possibles but they may not happen as well. I need to come up with plan to produce the work without any outside funding. If I do it all on my own I doubt I can go all out making super large plates, but I need to try. I need to do my best to get this done. The project is important, it would tell an important, possibly remarkable story about Canada, and about the people who live here.

My thoughts over the last few days centre around how to start out. Like anything once you get the ball rolling it is easier to proceed. At first there are always a lot of obstacles in the way. I have to figure my way past those impediments.  I think the way to go is that I need to start out smaller, do things slowly and proceed from there.

Here is my current plan:

- Use my existing small camper van as a traveling home. Will get a hitch attached to it.
- Buy a smaller lighter utility trailer and covert it to a wet plate darkroom). I need something small and light that the van can pull.
- Make 4x5, 8x10 and possibly 11x14 plates to start with, ambrotypes (glass) and tintypes (metal).
- Shoot in Alberta and British Columbia only.
- After a few years of this type of shooting, buy a small motor home of some kind ($20000 or less)used at a reasonable price. Use the same small darkroom trailer on this second vehicle. Move up to  the 14x17, 16x20 and if I ever get it the 35x35 camera.  Move on to new locations, shoot up North and eventually in Eastern Canada.

I will have to learn much  more wet plate in these early years, become very proficient at the process before moving on to the bigger plates, bigger cameras and longer trips. I need to be as good as anyone in the world when it comes to wet plate photography.

This seems like a feasible plan. Something that might work. I am 54 now, if I can started on "KANATA" by the time I am 57, then possibly move on to the bigger vehicle and cameras when I am 62 to 70 years old. This might work.

I would need to stay in very good physical shape to manage things at 65-70 but I think it might be possible. I might have to get an assistant (how do you do that?) at some point as well. I will do what I can to stay in shape,  eat right, exercise. Hopefully I will have health luck until 70, no terrible diseases before then.. My father worked hard until 79 years old before getting sick at 81 with cancer. I hope I can have the same kind of luck. Stay strong at least till 80. After that, I will let fate decide.

These photographs could be great. "KANATA" might create a lasting and important collection of images. Something that could live past my lifetime. It could be moving and powerful, and have a positive influence on Canadians, or on other people in general, from all countries. It would also be rather rewarding personally. Just think of it. Your dead and gone, your "dust in the wind", but a piece of you, a piece of your heart, your mind, your thoughts, your feelings, is left behind. Your forgotten but the images continue, they are alive, and live on!

"Ain't Photography Grand!!"

Note* Another part of the project might include making large wet plate collodion negatives, then printing them on silver gelatin paper or possibly as salt or albumen prints. Soon I will have 2 darkrooms up and running, 2 beautiful and very functional spaces to work in. Now anything is possible! Creating any type of photographic print is a possibility. I just need to work hard, chase it down and grab my opportunity!

Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Link: Lennon's Inspiration For His Song "Imagine"?

 The Cree words:
“Keespin esa Kasakehetoyah, Kasetos-katoyah, Kawechehetoyah, Namoya Ka-no-tin-to-nanhoyo.”
The phrase translates as, ‘Imagine that if, there was no hate, if we loved each other, we loved one another, that there would be no war between us.’”
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Check out this fascinating story, seems true, wonder if it is.

Email: The Hope That Tomorrow Brings

This is from an email I wrote to my photo friend Larry L.

"Feel very excited and filled with optimism and hope today. I think that is one of the great personal benefits of photography. Your always chasing that great image, whether in the darkroom or the field. You know you might do something  good, possibly something great tomorrow. That is so personally exciting and so rewarding. Tomorrow, the future, with the hope of making great imagery is always a beautiful thing for a photographer....anyway..

Thanks Gerry"

Turntable And Classical Records

Got me a used turntable today, a Hitachi HT-1 and some classical records!! I just set it up and everything works great and sounds quite nice in darkroom #2. The guy I bought from was a bit of an audio file (wall of records) with some high end turntable equipment in the room. He probably upgraded from the Hitachi to another more expensive unit.

The seller wanted $30 for the record player, go it for $25. This turntable will serve me nicely and for $25 even if breaks down, it is not a big loss. For the records he wanted $45, I got them for $40. So for a grand total of an additional $65 I my darkroom #2 sound system fleshed out. I can play cassettes, Cd's or LPs with the speakers or the cordless headphones.

The records were an especially good deal as I got 16 different composers, with 4 records per box set (16 box sets). I now have a total of 64 records to play on my new system, in my darkroom. They are from the Time-Life series so also have a booklet talking about the life of each composer. So not only will this be great music to work by, I will also learn a bit about classical movie history. Learning is never a bad thing!

Note* The Sony stereo cost $25, the extra Pioneer speakers $10, the Hitachi record player $25 and free Sony cordless stereo headphones. So my entire sound system cost me $60. The 64 classical records $40. There is years of happiness, contentment and joy in that $100 investment. Am really looking forward to listening to this music as I make Platinum-Palladion, Wet Plate Collodion and possibly Carbon Transfer prints in this new space. I feel grand today,  have so much hope for the future.

Here is the look of the gear and records:

Hitachi HT-1 record player, not an expensive unit, but it will serve me fine
16 classical composures on 64 records
Hitachi record player with the Sony stereo system, plus tapes, Cds and records.

Monday, February 11, 2019

Quote; Alexander Alekhine (Chess Grandmaster, World Champion)

"The purpose of human life and a sense of happiness is to give the maximum that a man is able to give."

Sunday, February 10, 2019

Quote: Alfred Stieglitz

"In photography there is a reality so subtle that it becomes more real than reality."

Link: Now This Is Fascnating! Film Of The Impressionists Working

Found this a WOW moment! Actual film footage of various Impressionist Painters (plus sculptor Auguste Rodin) shot in 1915 with the newly invented silent, black and white movie camera. Very rare and exciting footage.

The Impressionists ON FILM!

Links: Carbon Printing

Gosh photography is a never ending source of riches and excitement. Through a Facebook friend tongight I found out about a process called CARBON (TRANSFER) PRINTING. Here are some links to that process. It creates beautiful imagery. Takes a bit of work, and no doubt there will be a learning curve but I want to try this!! Carbon printing should fit perfectly into my new darkroom space. I can now do wet plate, platinum-palladion and carbon transfer printing in the space!!

"Ain't Photography Grand!!"

Making A Carbon Print
The Basic Guide To Carbon Transfer Printing Part 1
Alternative Photography-Carbon Transfer

Carbon Transfer Print, made by GPV Photography

Saturday, February 9, 2019

New-Used Headphones Working!

Received my little adapter device yesterday (headphone male, 2 RCA female) and was able to hook up my cordless free headphones to my $25 Sony Stereo this morning. The darn thing work GREAT!

I have 3 sets of the used headphones, the first ones I tried seemed to be damaged I was receiving sound in only 1 ear. The second set I put on was bang on perfect. They sound better than the stereos  own speakers. I listened to both cassette tapes and a CD, premium sound, with adjustable volume on the ear piece. I had some break ups, loss of transmission when I walked to the end of the darkroom #2 but after I raised the transmitter (line of sight), there were no more problems. I will try to find some rechargeable batteries for the headphone's (have some somewhere) and I should be set to go.

I am also going to do another Kijji buy (used stuff) on Tuesday, picking myself up a $25 record player- turntable and  a set of 16 different classical composers on 64 vinyl records for $40 (got a $10 discount by buying both). If the record player works properly, I should be able to listen to hundreds of hours of peaceful, moving music while I print. No one else will hear anything, and I can rest assured I am being courteous to those nearby that are trying to sleep (I tend to print all night). This is going to be grand!

Note* Got the headphones for free. Got to love that on a guards salary.

Feeling the groove!

Quote: Andy Warhol

"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art."

Quote: Sophie Scholl (Her Last Words Before Execution Via Guillotine At 21)

Today in 1943 a very brave, intelligent young woman Sophie Scholl and her brother Hans were executed by the Nazi's. Here is their important story, please have a look. Sophie died for freedom, fighting for the rights of all people.

The White Rose Resistance, Sophie Scholl

 "Such a fine, sunny day, and I have to go. But what does my death matter, if through us thousands of people are awakened and stirred to action?"


 Sophie Scholl Biography

Sophie Scholl

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Facebook: Want To Shoot More Film Next Trip



Gerry Yaum shared a memory.
Some more memories from last year. Want to try and shoot more film this coming trip, more than last trip (these linked photos are digital shot at 10000 ASA with the aid of a tripod). Thinking of taking a blad with wider lens to do portraits with. Would take the twin lens Rolleiflex but there are film loading issues with 2 of my 3 Rollies (do not really have the money to repair them just now). Am thinking a Hasselblad with extension tube might work better, might be more reliable in the scary dirtiness of the dump.

Gosh just remembered, I still have a bunch of 35mm film to develop from last trip also a bit of 8x10. Too much to do and not enough time to do it all!

Also need a new Thai based project to shoot.

What?

Various photos from Feb 6 last year in Thai, a Facebook memory