The
best photographic work of Jeff James evokes the sense of timing of a
Winogrand and the perceptive depth of an Eggleston. From his native
ground of Virginia, Jeff has been able to cut fragments that make
compositions both wryly intelligent and emotionally charged. As he says,
his images are like 'bookmarks' in the life of a town called
Harrisonburg. They achieve a feeling for American culture and American
life that comes from absolute belonging.
Jeff had a early period of frustrating experimentation, in which he tried to find his way in photography as a professional. After a period of years working in photo-journalism, living in Africa and even shooting for National Geographic there, he decided to forgo the profession and go for the art, which he says was the decision that set him free. Focusing on his art allowed him to make photography a witness to the personal experience of his life, his home town, and American culture generally.
Since that time, his work has evolved in a matter and manner that is restrained, sometimes austere, and often very funny. Some of his images have the likeness of evidence photos; evidence of the phenomenon of global consumerism and the hyper-reality of an often disneyfied American environment.
Almost all of this is accomplished in work that is physically encompassed by the town of Harrisonburg, Virginia and environs. There he's progressed through important life transitions; raising a family, making a living, and moving through his youth toward his middle years. Some of his work, consequently, has a deep-rooted relation to a specific place and his own private knowledge of it. As he's observed, his work is in part about his, his town's, and America's, "fading past and the uncomfortable struggle to remain relevant and young". His photography, based on the specific, the ephemeral and the wryly humorous, gently revises our notion of what in the world can be thought of as meaningful, and rewards the viewer who takes the time to look and linger.
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| Douthat, Virginia |
Jeff, how did it start for you?
My
older brother was probably my first influence. While I was still in
high school and he away at college, I remember him coming home one
year, Christmas break I think, with a stack of photos he took around
his campus. His compositions were basic, organized and symmetrical.
They made use of repetition and converging lines in space. I found them
easy to read and understand and enjoy. He had a rather abstract photo
of snow covering vehicles that really got me looking at the way things
appear under different circumstances and light, and how something so
normal could become so interesting in isolation.
I
also looked at National Geographic, my father had years of them
collected on a book shelf. I didn't read many articles; wouldn't have
understood much of them even if I tried, but I studied the photos. I
remember seeing one story on cowboys in Arizona or Montana by William
Albert Allard. I liked his name almost as much as I like his photos.
What struck me most about his photos was that I could feel them. I
understood the mood set by his subjects as well as the colors and
tones. He was my first favorite photographer, years before I even owned
a camera, and I would scan the table of contents for his name each
month hoping he would have a new story.
Prior
to art school, I was never a good student. As a kid I had learning
disabilities, and my teachers and school administrators didn't know
whether to put me in special education or to mainstream me. They tried
both and I succeeded in neither environment, yet managed to squeak by
and graduate from high school and then fail out of college.
But
when I started studying photography, things started to click, you
might say, and I experienced my first academic/artistic success in
life. I had completed two or three photography classes; I knew the
zone system and could expose and develop my film and print my pictures
with near perfect tones. My compositions were formal, with clean lines
and crisp details, but my subjects were effing boring and they
expressed nothing about who I was or the world that I knew. The first
image I made that resonated with me on a purely emotional level came
while walking around the city one day just looking for things to
photograph.
Prior
to that day my projects were preconceived, bordering on pretentious
and perhaps lacking real substance. I had the impression from art school
that if images were not preconceived, they weren't serious, they were
snapshots. But, on this day I set off to walk and look and make
photographs just for fun. The one image I remember from this day, was of
a dirty brick wall, literally black from decades of soot, in an alley
not too far from my home. A white rope hung diagonally across my
vertical frame tied from one nail to another. It had no functional
reason for being there and the wall in between was scratched and scored
almost like an etching, but having the feeling of some primitive
language.
Once
I made the image, I couldn't stop thinking about it and couldn't wait
to make a print. It spoke to me on a deeply personal level, but I had
no idea what it meant, nor did I really care. All the same, I was
reluctant, even scared to show it in class, because I knew my teacher
would want me to talk about it, and I had no idea what to say. I was
attracted to that spot and saw the composition and the elements within
on an intuitive level.
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
When you went to art school, who were the reigning gods of photography, if there were such figures presented to you?
The
reigning gods at my school were Sally Mann, Duane Michaels, The Starn
Twins, Ralph Gibson, Robert Mapplethorpe, Andres Serrano, Cindy
Sherman, Jerry Uelsmann, and Nan Goldin, just to name a few. I know we
were introduced to many more. I remember seeing Robert Frank's The Americans in
class and hearing about Friedlander and Eggleston, but they were not
hugely influential among the students. Everyone seemed to want to
emulate the others, who leaned more towards conceptual art, tending to
avoid or downplay a documentary approach to image making.
Was color used in school, or was it black and white mostly?
Color
photography was taught to upper level students, and by my senior year I
was shooting all color. My senior project was all Cibachrome prints,
with black and white transparencies layered over top. Sounds odd, but
some of them actually held together really well. Ralph Gibson came to
the school to critique the work of a handful of seniors; I was one of
them, and I remember him walking down the line of my images and
scratching his chin. He finally looked up and said, "I'm not sure what
to say about these. They must be very personal." In other words,"WTF".
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
Once you found your way in photography, who were the photographers that really resonated with you personally?
Eggleston,
of course, profoundly affected me with his democratic recognition that
all things have the power to resonate and express something personal. I
recently read a biography of Walker Evans and also his collaboration
with James Agee, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men and developed a
newly found appreciation for his work and his ability to capture and
see history in the present moment. Also Stephen Shore and Joel
Meyerowitz are natural favorites for their compositional mastery. Lee
Friedlander is a genius for his humor, timing, and complex
compositions. Likewise, Gary Winogrand's street work amazes me in how
he can see and capture and organize so many moving pieces at once. Peter
Beard's journals are amazing for the layers of information and the use
of mixed mediums, including blood! Roger Ballen's haunting pictures of
white South Africans appeal to my dark side. And James Nachtwey, Josef
Koudelka, and Paolo Pelligrin for the artful coverage and
interpretation of the human condition. The list goes on and bleeds
currently into many of my contacts at Flickr, who now reign highly
among my circle of influences.
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| Dayton, Virginia |
After college you tried to do photography professionally?
After
college, I went looking for photography jobs, but soon learned that
the education I received did nothing to prepare for an actual career in
the medium. So, through self-study and practice I developed a crude
commercial portfolio and journalistic portfolio and went around to the
local Baltimore newspapers getting some freelance work, and to the
commercial photographers seeking assistant work. I also shot a lot of
high school sports for a yearbook company. I was all over the place
then, and barely making a living, but learning a hell of a lot.
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
Then you moved to New York?
I
moved to New York for a year and took some night classes at the
International Center for Photography. During the day, I worked as a
printer in black and white at a commercial lab in Manhattan. I was also
documenting the Hari Krishna's of Brooklyn for my school project,
which took up a lot of my free time, mainly early mornings and
weekends. Their prayers started around four in the morning and I needed
to be at work by eight.
I
do remember reading about the Ashcan School of painters and their
gritty realistic work. I visited McSorley's bar to pay homage to John
French Sloan, and I gravitated towards the real and the dark and dirty
in my own photographs. So, that work was certainly influential for me.
Although I had known his work years before, I rediscovered Robert
Frank at this time and truly began to appreciate the power of his work.
Eugene Richards also made a huge impact on me with Exploding into Life,
the story about his wife dying of breast cancer. He made me realize
how intimate and sensitive photography could be, and how courageous you
had to be to make images like that. I also saw a Sebastiao Selgado
show, An Uncertain Grace, at the midtown International Center of
Photography. He blew me away with his wide angle compositions and his
ability to organize such expansive, chaotic spaces so coherently.
In
retrospect, I under-appreciated and underutilized New York, but I found
living there quite hard. It was expensive and unfriendly, and I was
too poor to appreciate the finer elements of the town, and too new to
know how to do it cheaply. It took forever to find a job, and to do so,
I had to hire a job agency first, which took half of my weekly income
for the next six months. I was hungry and bitter about the unnecessary
challenges and a bit too eager to find a way out. Toward the end of
that year, I was offered a full time job with the Associated Press
Agency as an assistant, which probably would have been a great "foot in
the door" opportunity to do photography professionally. But by then, I
was hungry and tired of the city grind, plus a girl in Baltimore was
calling me home. So I turned the job down and went home.
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
To Baltimore?
Yes.
I'd started to become a bit disillusioned with photography as a career,
my successes were few and far between, so when I returned to Baltimore I
enrolled in graduate school to get a teaching degree. I received my
teaching degree in 1992 and began teaching middle school art in the
Baltimore school system. While doing that, I applied for and received a
full scholarship from Coca Cola to pursue an MFA in photography at the
Maryland Institute College of Art. For four years, I worked on my MFA
and taught school full time.
One
day in the fall of 1996, I walked into the school office and saw a
flier recruiting teachers to go work in Kenya. I applied and got an
offer and in August of 1997, right after my thesis show and graduating
with my MFA, I moved to Kenya to teach 7th and 8th grade delinquent and
under privileged boys from Baltimore in the Kenya bush. The Boys of Baraka is a documentary about the school.
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
Living in Kenya must've been interesting.
It
was a marvelous experience, visually of course, but also watching
these boys grow and change into fine students who were learning about
responsibility and consequences. I taught all subjects, but I also
taught a photography class to a select few of the students. The school
built me a darkroom and bought me a lot of film to satisfy my
photographic needs.
I
spent four years working there, but then in August 2001, I returned to
the States and settled in Charlottesville, Virginia, to be near family
and reluctantly continued my teaching career. Reluctanty, because I
kept feeling that I had failed as photographer, or had given up too
soon. And after nearly ten years of teaching school, I kept wondering
if I could have made it professionally as a photographer.
Towards
the end of my time in Charlottesville, I met my wife and we took
volunteer jobs in a southwestern Ethiopian project directing a rural
health care facility and orphan's program. During that time, a friend of
mine was organizing a charity walk in northern Kenya for orphans of the
AIDS pandemic. A writer from National Geographic Adventure heard of
his walk, and asked to go along to write the story. With lots of
encouragement, I submitted my portfolio to National Geographic and
asked to be considered for the assignment. The photo editor called me a
few weeks later and offered me the job.
We
moved to Ethiopia in July 2004, and almost immediately after getting
settled, I flew to Kenya for this assignment. It was another great
experience, and I was really proud of the images I made. National
Geographic published about fifteen of them in their September 2005
issue, which left me feeling like a door had swung wide open for me, and
my career as photographer was going to take off. It didn't. Job offers
were nil, in spite of countless letters of interest and portfolios
mailed throughout the world. I was disappointed, but after feeling sorry
for myself for a while, I made a conscious decision not to pursue
photography as job again. I had other skills, and I now had a family to
support, and my disappointment was getting in the way of my love for
the medium.
It
was an amazingly liberating decision. For the last six years I have
integrated photography into my daily life, making images just for me.
As you know, I now live in Harrisonburg, Virginia. I work for Rosetta
Stone, and I manage a team of talented artists, including animators,
producers, illustrators, and a photographer. We do all the in-product
visuals for all of our language learning programs, so I'm still very
much involved with the creative processes in my professional life,
which is extremely rewarding. On very rare occasions, I even get to
shoot an image or two for the company.
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
Did being away from the U.S. bring you fresh eyes for the place when you got back?
There's
no doubt that those experiences have influenced how I look at America,
and what I choose to photograph here. Although life in rural Ethiopia is
seemingly hard from a first-world perspective, it's also much simpler
and more basic. Advertising does not dominate the landscape and filter
into every thought and desire. Most ads are hand painted and unique, not
mass produced. The effect of that is that most people aren't competing
to simulate what's most popular; most aren't even aware of the current
trends circulating the globe. Because of their poverty and the lack of
global information, life pretty much stays the same as it has for
centuries. Some may look at that and think, "how sad, no progress". But
being back in America and bombarded from every direction by signs and
noise masquerading as progress, all trying to persuade me to buy a
product that will make my life more fulfilling . . . I think perhaps the
simplicity of life in rural Ethiopia was more authentic -- closer to
what matters most.
I've
become sensitive to our cultural excesses and the deliberate
misinformation conveyed in advertising and in the media. Our values are
off-kilter and I worry about our future as a nation. When I photograph
today, I gravitate towards the iconic representations of our societal
excesses; the failings of government and personal responsibilities; the
decay of our values, and the absurdity of some of our laws that attempt
to control almost all public behavior. Many times, I photograph signage
with the intent to subvert its intended purpose; trying to skew it
towards something more real, or at least illuminate the farce. Some of
my work also depicts modernity in decay, and tries to point to the
reality before the modern virtual world engulfed us in mass information.
In this context, the theories of Jean Baudrillard about simulation and
simulacra interest me.
Many of my images are like bookmarks for me, saving a place in time that is rapidly fading from the collective memory, and will hopefully serve as a reminder that the essence of our culture was once more grounded.
Many of my images are like bookmarks for me, saving a place in time that is rapidly fading from the collective memory, and will hopefully serve as a reminder that the essence of our culture was once more grounded.
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
What other elements have been sources for your creativity?
Photography
and photographers have always been the deepest of my influences. I've
subscribed to Aperture for years, and always find something there to
motivate me. But occasionally I do stumble across other mediums that
nourish me in my artistic development. To name a few that stand out in
my memory:
In film, I loved Jim Jarmusch's Mystery Train and Dead Man; just about everything by the Coen Brothers, and The Three Colors Trilogy (Red, White, and Blue) by Krzysztof Kieślowski.
In music, I've always been a huge Bob Dylan fan, especially his more recent work. I listened to Time Out of Mind
incessantly when living in Kenya, while working in the darkroom or
editing pictures. I'll sometimes stumble across a song or an entire
album that has a rhythm and a tempo that touches a chord in my soul. The
last song on Dylan's album, Highlands, was one of those. Also, Rufus Wainwright's Sally Ann
was another one. I listened to it so often while editing my photos in
Ethiopia that I had to put a slideshow together of the images scored to
that song. They just seemed to go together.
I
like a lot of music, opera, some country and bluegrass. I love Nick
Cave, Tom Waits and more recently I've been enjoying the debauched
ramblings of Hank III (Hank Williams III). Actually, I think of his
music a lot when working on my Friendly City series.
I'm not exactly sure why. His lyrics don't match the place as I know
it, nor is my lifestyle akin to his, but the rebellious nature of his
work, a blend of punk and country, sits just right with me at this time
and place in life.
Cormac
McCarthy is one of my favorite authors; I like the rhythm of his
writing. It keeps a pace like walking or riding a horse. His characters
are dark and struggle with morality and keeping hope alive. His
descriptions are hyper-visual, allowing me to experience his places like
I would from a photograph. The Road scared me.
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
Which
brings us to another cultural influence, the internet and more
specifically, Flickr. What was your path to having a presence there?
When
I returned from Ethiopia in 2006, I struggled to find my direction in
photography. Everything there was so exotic, and my visual intent was
photojournalism. By the time I was stateside, I had already relinquished
that goal, and had settled into a new job and place, which didn’t
immediately inspire me or call me to photograph it. So, I ended up
turning the camera towards my family, making images bordering on
surreal, but for me very much reflective of this new time in life.
They
were transitional images, longing for the simplicity and
unconventionality of Africa, and adapting to the responsibilities and
pressures of being a father and working nine-to-five. I made two bodies
of work at this time, Bedtime Stories and Coming to Reason, and they developed while sharing work in the social networking environment of JPG Magazine.
I
stumbled upon JPG (jpgmag.com) while shopping at Barnes & Noble one
day, and I saw it as a great place to share work, receive feedback, and
an opportunity to get published. I wasn’t keen on the themes, and never
shot specifically to the themes. I only submitted work when I felt I
had something suitable. But what I liked most about that environment was
the connections I made with photographers around the world whose work I
admired. Many of the same contacts I have on Flickr today I met first
there at JPG. I remember seeing the work of Simon Kossoff, Pascal
Fellonneau, Jim Hart, Michael Ast, Anahita Avalos, and Alexis Gerard,
just to name a few.
When
JPG closed and re-opened. I closed my account. I was getting a little
tired of the incestuous nature of JPG. Everyone’s work was beginning to
look alike; and there was a lot of gimmicky photoshopping that didn’t
appeal to me. I think I was also getting tired of my own work and felt
that I needed to shake things up.
Also
at this time, I stopped photographing my family as subjects for my art.
I felt like that direction had run its course and that I was beginning
to repeat myself. Those images were also so inwardly focused and
personal, that I felt the need to look outward and start exploring my
environment. I opened a Flickr account around the same time, mainly
looking for storage solutions for the images that I deemed important.
While
browsing the Flickr groups one day I came across some of the people who
I knew and admired from JPG. I started exploring their work again and
the work of their contacts, and the groups that they belonged to. I was
blown away and humbled by the talent I discovered, and slowly started to
build contacts and participate in some groups. It's a great community
of artists who are passionate and committed to the development of their
work and supporting the growth of others. Sometimes I think that Flickr
specifically, and the internet in general are on the cutting edge of a
new genre of photography, or at least taking it to a new, more relevant
level.
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
Most of your work is delineated by the town of Harrisonburg, Virginia. Why is that, and how has the town influenced your work?
Harrisonburg
is my home, and I've fully assimilated to it. I live in the downtown,
and believe I have walked nearly every square inch of that area. I live
within five blocks from where I work, so all of my commuting is on foot
or by bike. This is where I bought my first house, and the only home my
children have ever known.
The
town Harrisonburg is in transition, on the cusp, perhaps, of
revitalization, transforming from a 'good old boy' town into something
more progressive. Five years ago, based solely on my first impressions,
the downtown barely had a pulse; closed shops dominated Main Street and
only a few restaurants existed. Today, it’s beginning to seem much
livelier; new shops and restaurants are popping up covering chipped
paint cornices with fresh paints and colors.
But
in spite of the recent growth and the presence of two universities in
town, it’s a quiet town, although far from dead, and definitely not
backward. It's a fairly small town of forty thousand people. Other than
public holidays, such as the Fourth of July, it’s rare to see large
pedestrian crowds walking around town. But you don’t have to search hard
to be reminded of the past, of a more interesting period before
Wal-Mart, superstores, and suburban sprawl slowly strangled downtown
businesses.
In
my work, I identify with subjects that represent the transitional
moments where there is evidence that something more vibrant existed.
Some of this is because in a very real sense I have gone through my own
personal transitions while living here -- beginning a new job, starting
and raising a family, resigning myself to the fact that I’m middle aged
and that my days of world travel and exploration are likely over. All
of those transitions are normal and none are bad, but they do preoccupy
me, and some of my work reflexively investigates subjects that are
representative of a fading past and the uncomfortable struggle to remain
relevant and young.
My
photographs of Harrisonburg then are first and foremost a personal
expression and not an attempt to document the realities of the place,
even though a sense of place can certainly be found in some of my work.
But that sense is intentionally subjective and not representative of
the whole. Harrisonburg is the palette I use to express the ideas of
transition and the struggle to appear vital at the risk of being
contrived or superficial. I see advertising as an example of this
superficiality, and so I’ll often photograph elements of advertising,
and juxtapose it against something that confuses or contradicts the
marketing intent.
I
choose these subjects to also highlight my belief that all acts of
marketing are an attempt to mislead or oversell the virtues of the
product. Similarly, my series, The Friendly City
named after Harrisonburg's own motto, is an ironic title, not because I
think Harrisonburg is unfriendly; it's far from it, but it is, like all
cities across America, a mixed bag of good and bad.
I
have no desire to slander the city; in fact, I absolutely love living
here, and truly think it's one of the finest places I've ever lived. I
feel very much at home and love being a resident of a small town with
big aspirations. So my goals in my photography and any message therein
are aimed at the American culture at large or myself.
I
have much to say about the American culture, and my fears of the good
parts slipping away between the cracks of political division and
devoured by gluttonous, self-serving special interests groups. I could
spend my free time traveling to larger cities or other towns trying to
diversify my content and build on it thematically, but I see no need to
do that. Harrisonburg has everything I want for a subject and a home.
Photographing here allows me more time to enjoy my family and job. It’s a
choice of the heart and of convenience.
In
your answer you used the terms 'juxtapose' and 'irony'. Juxtaposing and
irony are ways of seeing a world that's conflicted in some way. How
much can we as photographers do in showing the disparities of ideal and
real?
It
seems like there is a net deficit of authenticity these days. And I
would extend the definition of advertising beyond the standard
commercial space. Having a brand identity is no longer limited to the
companies or corporations that have a real product or an idea to sell.
Anyone
can be a brand and your brand identity can be anything about you from
the size of your breasts to your behavior to the style of clothing worn,
or how you adorn your house or car or body. Maybe this is stretching
the definition a bit far, but for me these outward expressions of
identity are an act of personal marketing and often as misleading as the
advertisements in the commercial marketplace and equally superficial.
I
think photographers can do a great deal to highlight or reveal the
absurd aspects of culture. We’re constant observers with a desire to
poke fun at the emptiness that pervades our culture; we’re satirists
with cameras, and therefore our goals are inherently critical but
constructive in nature. I see a great societal value in this type of
work, and hope it has the power and ability to communicate to the
masses. But, do I think it can really provide some catalyst to change?
To that end, I’m a skeptic.
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
Street
photography has its own special challenges and hurdles. It's one of the
those few art forms that calls for the artist to interact with the
outside environment, which sometimes produces frictions. Have you had
problems with your street photography?
Only
a few, but not with security or police, just paranoid people who think
I’m doing something wrong. I’m not even sure what they’re concerned
about, and it concerns me that there’s a perception out there that
photography is harmful or invasive. I think the image of the paparazzi
has left an indelible mark on public opinion that photographers have bad
intentions. People seem more concerned about one person with a camera
than Big Brother watching them from every traffic signal and street
corner.
Just
this past weekend, I had three people ask me what I was doing and tell
me to stop taking pictures or they were going to call the police. If I’m
uncertain about whether the place I’m standing is public or private
property, I will comply and just move on. If I’m positive I’m standing
in a public place, I feel obligated to explain my legal right to
photograph there. If the person is rational, I will also try to
alleviate their fears about my motives and explain what it is that
interests me in this place.
I’ve
even shown the picture on the back of the camera before, which usually
puts people at ease and opens the door to a friendlier conversation. On
occasions, if I’m feeling particularly belligerent and in the mood to
argue (which has been known to happen) I’ll challenge them to call the
police and I just keep photographing. I’m not afraid of confrontation,
but I certainly don't seek it out and would prefer to photograph without
any of it.
I've only been physically threatened once by some guy
on a moped. He chased me around town telling me he was going to break
my camera and kick my ass. Finally I just stopped walking and stared him
down, waiting for him to act on his threat or leave me alone. I didn’t
say a word, I just smiled and waited, and after a few minutes of his
profane tirade, he just sped away.
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
You
must carry a camera with you most of the time, because often what I see
are moments in time; for instance your picture of the lady with the
raised leg near the railroad car; chance juxtapositions of a window with
a reflected element, etc. How do you go about your artistry? I read
something you said about how you made the shot of the woman near the
railroad tracks; you were pushing a stroller! Or your picture of the
cannon juxtaposed with the voter registration sign. I'm thinking you
must not let too many opportunities pass, but you did say in a comment
that you often miss shots because of pushing that stroller.
I
always have a camera with me, usually hung around my neck. Currently,
I’m shooting with the new Fujifilm X100, which aside from the crappy
manual focus, I like it very much. Some years ago I had a larger Canon
5D with fast and heavy lenses. I sure loved the quality of the images,
but I hated carrying it around. With it hanging around my neck, I would
bend over to pick up my children, and the camera would swing forward
banging them in the head. So I got the Fuji.
Because
I have a camera with me at all times, I make the majority of my images
while going about my daily life. I commute to work either by bike or
walking, and will often leave home or work a little early to take a
circuitous trip around town. My family is extremely patient with me, and
has become accustomed to my falling behind when we’re out for a walk. I
don’t drive much, mainly because it’s a hassle to pull over or turn
around to get the picture. So when driving I tend to let potential
images pass by, which is sometimes painful. If I did stop, I think this
would be pushing the tolerance of my family a bit too far, especially
when there’s a crying baby strapped to a car seat in the back. When my
kids are older I hope that we can take more leisurely road trips without
worrying about diversions and time.
On
weekends, I’m allowed some alone time, two to three hours on Saturdays,
where I can purposely explore Harrisonburg and photograph. I really
look forward to this time each week, and strive to never to let anything
interfere with it. I do my editing and printing in the evenings after
the kids are in bed, which is only about 1 ½ hours each night, but I
make the most of it.
Essentially,
it's a challenge keeping it all in balance and not dropping the ball on
any of my responsibilities. I've made photography a priority in my
life, and make it fit into my daily schedule. Life is short and time is
precious, and I have to be protective of what little time I have for
image making, or I won’t grow as an artist. I need to be single-minded
in my pursuits outside of family and work. I don’t have much time for
watching sports or learning to play an instrument or expressing my
creativity in other mediums. And I’m just not that talented. If I hope
to master anything in life, I have to give photography all the time and
energy I can spare.
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
Your work contains a wonderful sense of wit and humor. What's the origin of that ability?
I
think it comes from my family, particularly my father's side. They're a
sardonic bunch, making fun of themselves and each other at every
possible moment. Growing up, I remember my aunts always greeting us with
a wry smile and then looking to my father and saying, "Why are they so
ugly, David?" And then they would laugh and hug us and make us feel
loved. My father also had a keen ability to hone in on the
contradictions in any social or political group's message, and use it
humorously to criticize them. So, I think I tend
do the same thing now, but with photography. I also confuse my kids
often with my attempts at humor. My daughter now looks to my wife and
says, "Daddy's just "ficking" us, right Mommy? She struggles with the
"tr" sound and gives it an "f". We get a chuckle when she points out big trucks.
Thank You, Jeff James
More of Jeff James work can be seen here
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
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| Harrisonburg, Virginia |
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