If you haven’t seen Part 1, go check it out to better understand where I’ve been going with this. Progress is happening very slowly on it, but it’s happening.

So here is Part 2. It was inspired by another one of Regina Spektor’s songs, on the same album as Part 1. The song is called “Lady”.

It started as a simple idea to show a performer getting ready, then performing. Pretty boring now that I’ve had some distance from the original plan, but as I listened to the song from time to time, I started seeing much darker images in my head. Anger, hurt and just overall self-loathing.

Once that happened, I immediately realized that it would be much more interesting to marry her wildly contrasting character facets into the same shoot and turn the subject of my study into a successful but self-loathing artist, something I’m sure many artists can relate to.

On one side, her impeccable, performing self, then on the other, the day to day agony that feeds her inspiration to create the kind of music her audience loves her for.

I worked once again with the wonderfully talented Shanda Palmer (makeup), Ashlen Saunders-Duke (hair) and for the first time, the absolutely gorgeous Cosette Jarrett, who incidentally had a really hard time with the character I threw her into.

Cosette is such a joyful and sweet woman… Asking her to smoke, smash a guitar, violently throw booze at a brick wall and generally appear very hurt, angry and troubled was a stretch and very much the opposite of what she’s like in real life, but she pulled it off incredibly well.

Last but not least, many thanks to Suzanne Walker for allowing us to shoot backstage and on stage.

Oh and speaking of which, yes, it was snowing HARD at the end of our shoot! It was an amazing experience and gave the images a different feel than I’d expected. One that I think helped us in the end.

Hope you enjoy!

I still have half a roll of photos that need developing, but I’m not gonna finish that roll until a model shoot in a couple weeks. So as far as I’m concerned, this won’t be a trilogy of posts like my trip to San Francisco. This is the second and last post for New York.

I also forgot to mention yesterday, the reason most of my iPhone shots are in black and white is because I wanted as much as possible to keep my photography of New York colorless. The city doesn’t need color. Sometimes it’s nice, but going in I knew I only needed to buy black and white film, so I figured I should shoot iPhone images expecting to remove all traces of color as well.

Anyway, here are the Holga shots. As you remember from my San Francisco trip, my Holga actually broke, but referring to my current camera as the “Diana F+” is nowhere near as “elegant” as describing my crappy camera as a Holga, so I’m sticking to calling it a Holga.

Here we go:

Yes. This is New York. From a pier on Coney Island.

Some New York humor. Where else will you get notification ON THE GROUND that the picture you’re about to snap is cliché and boring?!

I noticed several performers working for pennies in front of multi-million-dollar corporations and had to laugh a little.

I have an in-focus version of this, but this one is so much more beautiful.

The subway will take you everywhere you need to be…

Like to Washington Square Park, where I happened upon an awesome street performance. This first image is a bit reminiscent of San Francisco, but in New York these performers really brought on their A game.

First he jumped over one terrified woman.

Then he jumped over four of them.

Tough guy? Yeah, I’d say so!

Then, I went home (in color too!)…

And all I can think of?

“I miss New York.”

Last week, you saw the world of San Francisco in color. Today, you’ll see it in black and white.

Now, I may not have extensive experience as a film photographer, but I did pay close attention to when I felt I should be using color and when I shouldn’t. Hopefully my photography will convey this, but I wasn’t switching haphazardly.

Here we go!

Street performance away from the tourists.

The last moments of this crab were spent watching a curious child.

Ok, so I don’t care how much of a tourist I am for seeing Alcatraz, but I knew I wanted to from the start.

And then, on the day before last, I decided to go up to Twin Peaks and admire the view…

And as I looked up to the peak I was headed for, I noticed a small group of people. My instant thought was “Really? Tourists? Up here? In a group like that?”

The view got more breathtaking with every step. But as I got closer to the peak, I realized… I just walked into a wedding. I managed to get there just in time for the handsome couple to say “I do”. How sweet is that?!

And I couldn’t help but take some pictures. What a wonderful place to get married. The ceremony was tiny, with only about twenty people attending, the weather was perfect and the couple seemed profoundly happy.

iPhone photos coming soon…

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