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149
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2023
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Publié par
Date de parution
15 avril 2023
Nombre de lectures
2
EAN13
9780826505835
Langue
English
Poids de l'ouvrage
5 Mo
Every person can find their deepest passion and express that in their lives.
One night when I was leaving my corporate job in New York City, sitting on the 1 train heading uptown, it hit me like a slap across the face. I realized that I was not enjoying my life. It was time to grow up and change it. So I went home, took my suit and tie off, got comfortable, found one of those yellow legal pads and a pen, sat down and wrote at the top of the page “What do I want to be when I grow up?”
I began making a list by writing down what I liked doing and all the things I could do. Photography was in the mix. I kept at it, adding more to the list, for an hour or two and then put it down. I took a break, ate some dinner and then picked it up again. It was at that moment that PHOTOGRAHY leapt off the page—hit me in my heart and I realized how much I loved taking pictures. I found my passion. I knew it deep in my soul. It was then that I made the choice to dedicate every waking moment in my life to the craft of photography. I was 33 years old.
Publié par
Date de parution
15 avril 2023
Nombre de lectures
2
EAN13
9780826505835
Langue
English
Poids de l'ouvrage
5 Mo
AMERICANA PORTRAIT SESSIONS
AMERICANA PORTRAIT SESSIONS
JEFF FASANO
Foreword by Mary Gauthier
Introduction by Edd Hurt
VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY PRESS
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE
Copyright © 2023 by Jeffry Fasano
Published 2023 by Vanderbilt University Press
All rights reserved
First printing 2023
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data on file
LCCN 2023002352
ISBN 978-0-8265-0582-8 (hardcover)
ISBN 978-0-8265-0583-5 (epub)
ISBN 978-0-8265-0584-2 (web PDF)
Printed and bound in Canada by Friesens.
To Mario Cabrera, my mentor, teacher, and friend .
Without your guidance, your support, and your demand for integrity, and constantly telling me to learn your craft, this book would never have been possible .
CONTENTS
Foreword by Mary Gauthier
Preface
Introduction by Edd Hurt
AMERICANA PORTRAITS
Acknowledgments
FOREWORD
Mary Gauthier
A good photo is a beautiful image. A great photo captures the subject’s essence. Capturing an artist’s essence? You have to have empathy.
A few years ago, Jeff and I caught a matinee showing of Bohemian Rhapsody at Regal Green Hills Cinema. As we sat in the theater and the movie unfolded, we were blasted backward in time to the days when we were young, Queen was our favorite band, and it was us and them against the world.
“We’re four misfits, four people who don’t belong,” Freddie Mercury tells music manager John Reid at a rooftop restaurant. “And we’re playing for other misfits. The outcasts, we see them there, in the back of every room, they don’t belong either. We are their band. We belong to them.”
Freddie was talking about me. The queer kid from a small southern town, awkwardly trying to navigate my identity, who loved this band back when it really, really mattered to have a band, my band, that understood.
When the movie ended, Jeff and I walked out of the theater stunned, silent. I looked over, and saw that like me, he had tears in his eyes. Turns out, he too was one of those outcasts in the back of the room when he was a kid, one of the ones that didn’t belong. Queen was his band, too.
When you grow up as an outsider, you become an observer. Jeff and I are both observers. Him with his camera, me with my songs. We document and chronicle what we see.
Behind the soundboard, on the side of the stage, in the back of the room, Jeff seems to be everywhere in Nashville, all the time. The Bluebird, City Winery, Third and Lindsley, the Family Wash, the Station Inn, Exit Inn, AmericanaFest—the list goes on and on. Camera ready, eyes darting around, looking for the shot. The one that reveals a truth.
Jeff’s photos are a reflection of the heart of the man who cried after the Queen movie, and the kid who loved the outsider band, who saw himself among the different, the curious, and the weird.
Empathy comes from being a skilled observer.
The magic in Fasano’s photos?
Empathy.
PREFACE
My Story
Every person can find their deepest passion and express that in their lives.
One night when I was leaving my corporate job in New York City, sitting on the 1 train heading uptown, it hit me like a slap across the face. I realized that I was not enjoying my life. It was time to grow up and change it. So I went home, took off my suit and tie, got comfortable, found one of those yellow legal pads and a pen, sat down, and wrote at the top of the page, “What do I want to be when I grow up?”
I began making a list by writing down what I liked doing and all the things I could do. Photography was in the mix. I kept at it, adding more to the list for an hour or two, and then put it down. I took a break, ate some dinner, and then picked it up again. It was at that moment that PHOTOGRAHY leapt off the page—hit me in my heart and made me realize how much I loved taking pictures. I found my passion. I knew it deep in my soul. It was then that I made the choice to dedicate every waking moment in my life to the craft of photography. I was thirty-three years old.
I wanted to quit my job right then and there, but my father convinced me that the journey toward that end was just beginning. He said, “You will quit your job, but not yet.” He was right. I then begrudgingly made a plan for the journey ahead and committed myself to it. I built a darkroom, purchased lights (thanks, Dad!), and practiced, practiced, and practiced some more. When I was not at my nine-to-five job, I ate, drank, and slept photography. It was etched into my soul, and the joy it brought me was something I really had never felt before—other than playing baseball, my first passion. There really wasn’t anything else I did during that time. The journey led me on a path of discovering the artist in me and developing a body of work I could bring to the world when I did quit my job. I carried my camera everywhere I went.
Then one day, when I was wandering around lower Manhattan on my lunch break looking for someone or something interesting to photograph, it hit me—I was done. I went back to my office in World Trade Center One, sat at my desk and typed out my resignation letter. I was forty years old.
A few months later, I left that corporate job and a world that no longer resonated for me. My intention was to create a new life that was fulfilling and enjoyable. You see, I didn’t leave a job, I just came to the end of a part of my life and was ready to move into the next part. I made a commitment to myself to do this. And by following through on this commitment, I not only created this life, I am now living it. It sure has been quite a journey and I am doing things I never dreamed of. One of those unbelievable things on my wish list is this book.
On my path, I have had so many amazing people support me in creating my dream—too many to name here, and this proved to be so important—as they encouraged me to maintain my focus on my commitment.
My father was my rock who knew it when I did, and held that vision with me. Mario Cabrera, my mentor, teacher, and friend, was with me every step of the way, holding me to a standard of integrity that I have carried with me—and I maintain it to this day.
It has been a long road filled with peaks and valleys; times of great unknowing that led me to learn how to trust myself and the process. And to stay open in my heart to anything and everything that came along on the path. I just said Yes!
Along this path, I have had the great fortune to meet, photograph, and build relationships with notable artists from around the world, many of whom you can see in this book. Through the love of my craft, doors opened, and as I walked through them, I connected with so many interesting people who are creating their life, their creative expression, and expressing it to the world.