Thursday, August 12, 2010

Diaconal Ordination

I used to be a newspaper photographer. But now I have the great honor to be the official photographer for St. Nicholas Russian Orthodox Church and the Catholic Diocese of Juneau. On Wednesday-August 11, 2010 I took photos of the Diaconal Ordination of Steven Patrick Gallagher at St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Fishing with Tammy

I went fishing last Monday with my friend Tammy Lee Beam. We went to False Point Retriet, Cordwood and Funter Bay and got silver salmon and one halibut. A few of the silvers were quite large. The biggest one had a hook and hootchie from a previous battle with a fisherman in its mouth. I kept the hootchie for good luck. Tammy is a commercial fisherman and I learned a lot from her that day.

My friend Buddy Tabor gave me permission to use his songs for my videos. One of my favorite songs of his is, "Cannery Lights". It was fun to use the song in this video. If our schedules work out I hope to fish a lot more with Tammy.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Hipstamatic




I got a fun new app for my iPhone called Hipstamatic. It makes it look like photos taken on your iPhone were taken with a instamatic with a plastic lens circa 1968, and the negatives were rotting in a musty basement.

I took some photos of my frined Katleen. She is a great waitress working at El Sombrero and despite the fact she was born in 1992 she is a flower child from the 60s.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Folk Festival Thursday Highlights

Here is a short film of Alaska Folk Festival Thursday highlights.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010


I became an Alaska Folk Festival fan by accident. I was walking home from dinner at the long-gone City Café one night and noticed several people going into the Alaska State Museum. I went in to investigate and stumbled into the Folk Jamboree. I only stayed for an act or two before continuing my walk home.

I don’t think anyone there that night 36 years ago could have imagined what the Folk Festival would grow into from its humble beginnings.

The Folk Festival has always been one of my favorite events to attend and photograph. I’ve heard so much great music and forged countless friendships. Some festivals I tried to take photos of all the acts; others I have been content to sit and listen to music or visit with friends in Centennial Hall.

I have thousands of images of the Folk Festival, and it was a near-impossible task to pick the handful of images for this show. Every image brought back so many joyful memories in a “blinding flash of light,” to steal a line from the great Buddy Tabor. I remember the night Charlie Campbell brought the house down with Violent Femmes covers during a dance at the Armory. He was as hot as Chernobyl that night—every neutron was shaking free and blasting into space. His hair was flying like he was some medieval war lord charging into battle. When he flopped on his back, still playing his guitar, every girl in the house screamed with delight. I can’t begin to tell you how jealous I was of him that night.

My first published photo of the Folk Festival in the Juneau Empire was of the Rhythm Romancers playing a dance at the Armory in 1983. In that photo is my good friend Robin Dale Ford, one of my favorite Folk Festival performers.

My mom, Dorothy Wallace, died just before the start of the 2006 Folk Festival. While grieving, I attended the festival and was immediately surrounded by so many friends doing their best to cheer me up. That night Robin Dale Ford dedicated her set to my mom. The way she phrased her dedication still resonates with me: “This is for Brian’s dear mother, Dorothy.”

For me, the Folk Festival is a great sign of spring, like Easter and Passover or the first crocus blooming. To sum it up in one phrase: the Folk Festival is joy in its purest form.

I hope you enjoy these few photos of the many Folk Festivals I have photographed.

Brian Wallace

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Dammed if I do




I had my iPod set to random play as I was cleaning my house on Saturday when a long forgotten song played and brought back a long forgotten memory.

I was driving back to my apartment in North Seattle from my Aunt Katherine's house in the Magnolia district. You have to cross the Ballad Bridge on 15th Ave. to head north from my aunts house. I got caught by the draw bridge as it was letting several large ships pass. It was going to be a longer than usual stop so I turned off my VW bug and stood out of the car to wait for the bridge to go back down so traffic could resume.

I was a student at the University of Washington and miserable. My housing situation was terrible and I was a so-so student at best.

I put a kick ass stereo system in my car and was always blasting music while I was on the road. My favorite radio station in Seattle was KJR. I liked to listen to the Dancin' Danny Wright show. On this cool November afternoon in 1981 when I was stuck on the bridge he played "Dammed if I Do" by the Alan Parsons Project from the album EVE. I looked to the sky as the song was playing and I saw Northwest Orient Airlines 747 climbing into the sky after taking off from SEATAC International Airport.

"I don't want to tie you down
Don't need a reason to have you around
But each time you walk away
Don't be surprised if I ask you to stay
Can't sleep alone at night
I just can't seem to get it right
Damned if I doAnd I'm damned if I don't but I love you
I said I'm damned if I doAnd I'm damned if I don't cause I love you"

At that very moment standing on the bridge watching the jet take off and listening to "Dammed if I do" I decided to drop out of the University of Washington. I suspect I would have eventually come to that decision but I made it then. Not because of the song it just helped me recall that big decision. When the bridge went back down I went to a travel agent and got a cheap ticket to New York City where I had a crazy fantasy of becoming a fashion photographer. When I recall those days I shudder and marvel at my naivete. I flew off like Don Quixote to conquer New York City armed with two Canon F-1 35mm cameras and three lenses and one back pack filled with my worldly possessions.
I somehow got into a fashion photography workshop at Parsons, The New School for Design. I quickly learned I didn't have the talent to become a fashion photographer. I was not angry about finding this out but I needed to try and get it out of my system. I had the greatest time of my young adulthood in NYC. I crashed most of the time at the Hotel Rio just off of Times Square. It was$13 a night or $8 an hour to stay there. Busted window, no curtan lots of roaches crawling over everything and when the wind blew you could smell the pidgeon crap. I was in heaven. I stayed in NYC until mid-April when my money ran out. During my last week I had just enough to go and see the musical "EVITA" The front row seat cost me $48. I saw it the day the Falklands War started on April 2. I made my exit from NYC and came back to Juneau with my tail between my legs totally defeated and about $18 to my name. Getting home was another great adventure but I will save that story for later.
I got back to Juneau and crashed at mom and dad's house. A few weeks later I got my job at the Juneau Empire as a photographer. I had that job for 27 years.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Evita Poster


I have been pretty bad about updating my blog. I have been swamped with several projects that I have undertaken to keep me busy and creative while being unemployed.

The best thing I have been doing is to take photos of the Juneau-Douglas High School production of the musical "Evita." The first time I was in London was in July of 1978. I was on a $8-dollar-a-day budget for my trip. I was wondering around the West End and I lucked into tickets to see "Evita" just a few weeks into its original run. The front-row-seat cost me about $50. I suspect that was the night I fell in love with Argentina.

Today I set up my studio at Juneau-Douglas High school and gave just a few technical directions for my photo intern Hannah Bibb. Then Hannah took all the photos of Shanae'a Moore who is playing the title role of Evita. It is fun to see the play slowly come together and to see the quick progress of my student Hannah.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Evita-Buenos Aires


Shanae'a Moore being lifted in adoration during Evita play rehearsal. Shanae'a is the star of the show and is doing a fantastic job. The JDHS theatre department has had many great leading ladies for their musicals. Shanae'a is right up there with Patty Hull, Michaela Goade and Gysell Stone and many others.

I am really enjoying taking photos in black and white with my digital camera. It re-connects me with my photographic roots.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Jill Paintings

Comic filter
Pastel filter
Impasto filter

I just got the Alien Skin Software program called Snap Art 2. I have been up most of the night playing with it and learning how it works. Here are some examples of what the program can do. There are several filters that can transform photos into paintings. No computer program can ever replace what a real painter can do when he or she pours their soul onto a canvas but in the digital realm it can make pretty convincing images.

I was at a Folk Festival Dance two years ago and I took photos of my friend Jill dancing to the Celtic Rock band Fire on McGinnis. Here are examples of the Impasto, comic and pastel filters I just got.

Jill inspired me to start my blog. For my five blog followers check her blog out to see what a great blog should be like.
http://arcticglass.blogspot.com/

Monday, January 18, 2010

Evita dance scene


I got my new Miller/DS-20 fluid Head tripod today! It is the most expensive tripod I have ever bought but it is a splendid new tool to have.

I took photos at the Juneau-Douglas High School Theatre Department's rehearsal for the upcoming production of "Evita" today. I can tell the kids were getting tired from the hours long play rehearsal but I can tell there was a lot of progress made. The JDHS Theatre Dept. director is Michaela Moore. Every year her shows are very good. This is a photo of Aaron Cohen who plays Che and the star of the show Shanae'a Moore working on a dance move. I won't post too many more photos of the rehearsals since I do not want to show too much of what the kids are doing in advance of the show. I am looking forward to going to every performance!

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Paris and Stephanie



As I look through all of my negatives and slides from my career I keep finding priceless treasures.

This photo is of me and my friend Stephanie at a cafe near the Opera House in Paris, France and at a picnic on the Seine river walkway.

I attended the Northern Short Course (NSC) in Syracuse, NY in March of 1992. The NSC is a workshop for Photojournalists sponsored by the National Press Photographer's Associatin for its East Coast members. I really could not justify going to the NSC since I could have gone to a simuler workshop on the West Coast but it was someplace very uncool that year like Stockton, CA. Not that I consider Syracuse a cool place but it permitted me a great excuse to spend 5 glorious days in New York City after the workshop.

I really did not learn too much at the NSC. After the workshop I went to catch a bus to the Syracuse airport. I found a bus stop but I had to wait for a half hour until the bus arrived. I went into a bar to get out of the cold. I sat down and my friend Dan was in the bar as well and talking to a woman who turned out to be Stephanie. We talked for a few minutes and I found out she used to live in Moscow. I asked if she knew my friend Heidi who was also working in Moscow and it turned out she did. We all knew Heidi. Dan from New York City, Stephanie from California and me from Alaska. In a world of billions 3 random people in a bar in Syracuse all had a connection.

I could not talk long since I had to catch my bus. Stephanie and I exchanged email.

Long story short we kept in contact and that September we went to Paris where Stephanie was my guide and interpreter. I was in search of the best Duck l'ornge as well as taking photos. Fun days spent riding the metro and visiting sites like Jim Morrisoin's grave in Pere Lachaise Cemetery and the other usual sites. Nights were spent looking for transcendent dining experiences.

We have visited each other many times since then. In places like Hong Kong, Juneau, New York City. She just gave birth to a son. She and her partner live in Beacon, New York where she is the director of Fovea Exhibitions.

http://www.foveaexhibitions.org/

Monday, January 4, 2010

Heidi visit




The New Years weekend was full of emotions. None of my feelings were about my former work. I have accepted that and it is history. More important things were stirring.

I took my daily walk through town and photographed a raven in a tree at Evergreen Cemetery. Its stark lonely vigil matched my mood.

All of Juneau except me was happy with the clear weather and a rare blue moon.
Sunday morning came and I spent several hours clearing out old files. Bank statements from 1998, auto manual for car I sold 20 years ago.
I had the music of Aztec Two-Step on full volume on my stereo to try and blast away my blues. The louder I played my music the deeper I fell into a well of melencholy.
I noticed there was a message on my cell phone. There was a familiar voice I have known since childhood. "Brian, This is Heidi. I am in town for a few days........."
Beautiful, wonderful Heidi. I have not seen her for about five years when we last saw each other in New Jersey. We have been friends since our grade school days of playing softball together with her and her sisters at the Capital School Playground. We worked together at the Juneau Empire back in the 1980s. She started out as photo intern for the Juneau Empire and has become a very successful international photographer.

http://www.heidibradner.com/

It was a short visit. I only got to see her for a few hours. But it was enough to make me as happy as I have been in many months. She will be on next plane back home to London soon. And I will be wondering the streets of Juneau.

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Riley Woodford in concert January-2, 2010.

I am playing with the video option on my new Canon Camera EOS-7. I have a lot to learn before I can make a good clip. Here is a video of my friend Riley Woodford singing my favorite Grateful Dead song "Me and My Uncle" during a Saturday concert.

Friday, January 1, 2010

Favorite photo of 2010


I took this only 13 hours into the new year but I suspect this photo of my good friend Mari in the 17th Annual Polar Bear Dip just might be my favorite photo for 2010. A graduate of Davidson-the Harvard of the South and currant University of Washington Law student has both beauty and brains to match.