Time came to take
Gilli-the-Bus out on the road again for a prolonged adventure. This time around, along with offering wet
plate workshops different states and continuing to create via in that medium, I
want to concentrate on working with daguerreotype technique on the road. To me daguerreotype is the purest form of
photography and thus most beautiful, and my goal is to streamline my workflow
in the field. Also, I wanted to show
some of the natural beauty of this country to my girlfriend, who I knew would
make the trip more fun.
The plan for this trip
is rather loose. I scheduled a few wet
plate workshops, set up some portrait sessions, and in between those the aim is
to find some nice nature spots to get away to and make daguerreotypes. Originally the plan was to make it as far as
John Coffer’s Wet Plate Jamboree , and
I even corresponded with John on that matter.
However, after some careful and difficult calculations I realize now
that I simply can’t make it there and should stick to the western part of US in
order to both not blow the budget completely out of proportion and, most
importantly, to have time to concentrate on daguerreotyping. A heart-wrenching apology letter is now on its
way to John, hope he doesn’t hold this one against me – I’ll do my very best to
make it there next year, with or without Gilli.
First stop after
leaving San Diego on Sunday the 15th, was a workshop east of Gilroy
CA with Wayne Seltzer. We met off
highway 152 at a little tourist trap of a rest spot called Casa De Fruta. I think at some point it was a fruit farm,
and it may as well still be that in the background. Now though it’s basically a private mini
amusement park with a little railroad and peacocks and old equipment and a gift
shop and so on. I passed that place many
times on my way from San Jose to San Diego when I went to school there and so I
knew there was a good parking spot for Gilli.
Wayne met us there Monday morning and we dove right into it, while
Jozlynn had a picnic among the peacocks and did some painting. After I showed Wayne the ropes and we did a
little developing test strip and an image, it was time for him to pour his own
plate and for his first subject we decided to do a portrait of him. He did great, just a little hesitant. Hesitation is actually a very common thing
among beginners with this process. While
collodion does require a relatively high level of care and one can’t be sloppy
if good clean images are desired, the actual pouring of any liquid onto the plate
should be done with bravery and determination and in a steady controlled
stream, which of course varies from one step to another. Many beginners are timid with the liquid and
it’s of course understandable. Wayne’s
plates were great though – below is the plate I made as an example, and Wayne’s
first plate. Can’t wait to see him
acquire gear and chemistry and start pouring.
While rummaging through
chemistry boxes recently packed into the bus for the ling journey, I
discovered, to my chagrin, that I left a gallon and a half of freshly mixed and
tested silver in my sink in San Diego…
Having only brought minimal amount of silver nitrate crystals for emergency
purposes, I was now faced with not being able to fill my 8x20in tank, and I was
really looking forward to putting my freshly-refinished banquet Burke and
James. Luckily I was very close to Bay
Area and needed to pass through there on the way up the coast. I had a strong feeling that after some
panicky texting to local wet plate artists I would be able to procure 200-300g
that I would need to be back in action.
Indeed, I soon had three positive replies. While two of my wet plate brothers didn’t
have quite enough crystals in stock, Tony Seghal said he had a bit of extra on
hand and so, due to my initial negligence, I had a pleasure of briefly meeting
him and his family just east of my San Jose.
Resupplied with 200g of silver nitrate I now had just enough for some
panoramic images and moved on up, across the Golden Gate Bridge and into the
best part of California.
Next on the agenda
was a really exciting project; a commission I received to make a number of
daguerreotype and wet plate images at a picturesque Northern California farm in
Willow Creek. Before that though, I wanted to take a day or two to test all
systems by making a few plates.
Northern California
is incredibly picturesque and I could have stopped a hundred spots, but the
place chosen for the first daguerreotype was an offshoot that runs parallel to
highway 101 called Avenue Of The Giants.
The reason for the name being that the road winds its way for a number
of miles between and around some fantastic specimens of old-growth redwoods,
which dwarf even the 8x10x35ft Gilli. If
passing up or down 101 through south Humboltd country, the extra 20min you’d
spend on that detour are a must. Better
yet, park and hike a bit there – incredible.
I found a perfect little shady spot to back into and started setting up
for a plate. This was the first time
making daguerreotypes aboard Photo Palace Bus, so setup took a bit longer. Meanwhile, Jozlynn found out that the river
was within stones-throw from where we parked and so a dip in the gentle Eel
river was in order. While cooling off
there, I saw a composition for my inaugural plate. Oddly enough, by the time I was done buffing
the plate, all of the bromine fumed out of my box, so when I went to it after
getting the color I wanted from iodine, no color change was occurring even
after a minute. I decided to see how the
plate would turn out with what would have been Daguerre’s original process – only
iodine and mercury. While the plate was
in developing chamber, I went to mix up the fix. For the life of me I wouldn’t find hypo… sheesh…
I looked for it all over because that one I knew I didn’t forget, but in
the end settled for quickly mixing some KCN, as it can also be used to fix
daguerreotypes when one is in a pinch like I appeared to be in. I overestimated the amount needed though and
so the plate exhibited chemical swirls, while also being ultra-high in contrast
due to absence of bromine in sensitizing stage. I am still on the fence on whether or not I’m
going to keep it...
Next day another systems
test was to be done, this time in my favorite little park in the whole works –
Redwood Park in Arcata. It’s a fairy
tale type park where one can walk among 200+ft trees and feel like an ant. I found an incredible parking spot in the 11th
street parking lot, after finding out that my usual larger 14th
street one was closed for city activities.
That parking spot I found though deserves a picture and that's why it's leading this post on top. Gilli-the-Bus is
longer than the entire width of that parking lot, and so to find this little
miracle at the very end of it and closest to the trails was a real blessing. There I made two plates. One of them was slightly damaged during
gilding, but the second one finished just right and so with that accomplished I
was ready to move a bit east to the farm assignment.
While on the NYCTrip earlier this year, I met Michael
Patterson – a collector of daguerreotypes, who runs a high-functioning organic
vegetable farm in the middle of redwood forest.
I can’t even begin to list all the crops grown there, but I can say that
this farm is operated with love and attention that every farm should receive. In New York, Michael mentioned that he would
like his farm documented with daguerreotypes, so we kept in touch and as the
trip neared, made plans that fell on the days when he’s not quite as busy with
tending the land.
Michael moved north from
Los Angeles in the 80s and in the 90s was introduced to daguerreotype
collecting and aesthetics by Peter Palmquist.
You may remember that name from the West Coast Trip Part I entry. Prior to his untimely passing, he
was a very prominent member of daguerreotype circles and I was lucky enough to
meet his long-time partner Pam Mendelson, who bestowed upon me Peter’s camera –
a Burke and James 4x5 Orbitar. It’s an
oddball camera, which has a fixed 65mm lens with helicoid focusing, designed
for ultra-wide shots only. I took it
along with me because of cameras I have it’s actually the easiest one to use in
order to have 65mm lens on 4x5 format.
As it happens, the daguerreotype I made of Michael’s house was done with
that camera and the image, which completed a certain historic circle, came out
beautifully ethereal. Another image
made during the two days competed a long-time arc – the ¼ plate image of
Michael’s family was placed in a beautifully crafted leather case, made by Alan
Bekhuis more than 15 years ago when he still lived in New York City. Now Alan lives in New Zealand, makes top-end
daguerreotype equipment, and doesn’t have time to spend on small projects like
cases, but back then he made them perfectly, with the best hinges and locks I’ve
ever seen in modern cases, and Michael hung on to that one case for all these
years waiting to fill it with a worth image.
It was truly an honor to be able to end that wait and with a plate
developed in a chamber made by Alan himself.
All in all, the farm
experience was surreally satisfying – while making a plate of two pepper plants
against the background of forested hills, I realized that there’s no place I’d
rather be at or activity I’d rather be performing and a real sense of bliss
came over me. I very much look forward
to possibility of similar jobs in the future.
Jozlynn also picked
up a new artistic passion – wood burning.
There was a simple burner in the communal kitchen of field crew, and we
both had our go at it. Jozlynn got so
much into it that she was up burning away into the wee hours of the night as I
was in the darkroom varnishing tintypes and sealing daguerreotypes.
I hope to receive good
scans of the plates I made for Michael later, so I can use them in my
portfolio, but here’s a quick video of the family daguerreotype and an 8x10
tintype of the field of tomatoes with a gorgeous walnut tree in the background.
Before I left I had to make a daguerreotype for myself. For my subject I chose an apple tree that we were parked next to. Since childhood I've had a connection with apples and trees they grow on and so I really like this plate. It's simple and makes my mouth water.
In the morning, before leaving I was asked to make a tintype
by one of the farm hands named Tyler.
He’s got a great personality and is artistic in his own right, so he
came up with a concept and asked me to execute.
He wanted to be pictured sitting with a morning coffee and a cigarette,
smoke rising, contemplating future paths. Collodion is slow and is not known
for capturing smoke very well with natural light, but I gladly accepted the
challenge and after making the first plate from a bit farther away and with
more of the farm atmosphere included, moved in for the second plate, which I
wanted for myself after seeing how the first one turned out. With a lens cap for shutter and my trusty
8.5in 3.2 Voigtlander Petzval I was able to secure the following results.
We departed in the afternoon and drove all day east and slightly south, in the direction
of Nevada City, CA, where I had another scheduled workshop with Val Camp. Val is an avid darkroom and digital
photographer, and works in the movie industry.
He was really excited to be able to dip his toes in some collodion, and
his attentiveness allowed him to catch on right away, so pretty much all the
plates we did that day on the side of the little park chosen as workshop
location were near perfect. Here’s the
plate with which I showed him the ropes and then his first plate - you can hardly tell apart the quality. I think another quality collodion artist will
soon be making his appearance.
After the workshop we drove east in the direction to Salt Lake City, where Christopher Erin, a very talented ULF film and wet plate photographer, was waiting for a daguerreotype plate of his own to be made. The easiest way out of Nevada City going east is highway 20, which goes over a number of mountain passes and thus is slow as molasses to drive on in a 40 year old bus… On top of one of the mountains there’s a pullout with a parking lot and a nice view. I saw that spot from the corner of my eye and had to turn around a bit down the road, but it was all worth it. The view was tremendous and I decided to put the 8x20 B&J to use there for the first time. Since I had to mix silver and fill the tank, prep time took a bit longer than usual, but that just gave the light a chance to get better. The resulting plate seen below, which was a tad shy of perfection due to my not working with that format for a number of years, sold quickly and is now varnished and curing before I’ll mail it out from who knows what town I’ll be passing through in a week.
Driving all evening and
slightly into the night put us in a little town of Winnemucca, Nevada for the
night, and next day I literally drove drove all day to make it to Salt Lake
City before the sunset. Jozlynn has
never seen the Temple there and at sunset it’s a really pretty sight. I pulled up to the western gate of Temple
Square with the sun about 2in above the horizon. While Jozlynn hopped off to go exploring all
the various museums dedicated to Mormon culture and faith, I went into
overdrive mode and set up the chemistry and camera. Running to the temple with a tripod topped
with a loaded camera, I got there as the red rays of the sun were illuminating
top half of the image. With me, knowing
that the path in front of the Temple is rather narrow, I brought the 4in Dallmeyer
1aa wide angle hemispheric lens. Hiding
some of the temple behind a tree to juxtapose them, I sterted my 1min f32
exposure. By the time I was half-way
done the sun was totally gone, but the plate turned out neat and I was glad to
at least make one plate that long day.
Once the plate was rinsed and drying we
moved on to Christopher’s house - a beautiful modern structure with open floor
plan and a great garden. It was nice to
get off the road for two nights in a row there, a little retreat amid the
travels.
Christopher and I spent a lion’s share of the next day battling the air conditioning in Photo Palace Bus darkroom. AC has been the last thing to be done in there for 6 years now… Budget ran out before it was installed during initial construction, and ever since then I just couldn’t seem to find the multiple thousands of dollars that would be needed for installation of a real RV-style rooftop AC (which needs an special generator along with it and at many point metal fabrication and welding would be required, so it’s not at all cheap). Lacking AC and if left in the sun, the darkroom often and quickly heats up to past 100°F and working there becomes a real challenge. I can endure it ok, but it would be much better off for the chemicals to be working at decent temperatures, and also when I invite people back there I don’t really enjoy giving them an unsolicited sauna experience. To combat the heat on this trip I did get a nice Honda generator (which was needed to run daguerreotype equipment anyway) and a floor-standing room-type AC unit. I’m not going to bore you with the baffling details of exactly what it’s doing and how it’s not exactly working, but let’s just say that Chris and I couldn’t figure it out and even thought that the unit I had was defective, and so actually went and picked up a used other one from Craigslist. Nothing worked though, and in later in the day I had to make the daguerreotype of him and his wife in the darkroom that was still 98°. Luckily, I was able to fume the plate in the house darkroom where it was nice and cool. I totally forgot to make a copy of that plate too, just now thought of it…
Christopher and I spent a lion’s share of the next day battling the air conditioning in Photo Palace Bus darkroom. AC has been the last thing to be done in there for 6 years now… Budget ran out before it was installed during initial construction, and ever since then I just couldn’t seem to find the multiple thousands of dollars that would be needed for installation of a real RV-style rooftop AC (which needs an special generator along with it and at many point metal fabrication and welding would be required, so it’s not at all cheap). Lacking AC and if left in the sun, the darkroom often and quickly heats up to past 100°F and working there becomes a real challenge. I can endure it ok, but it would be much better off for the chemicals to be working at decent temperatures, and also when I invite people back there I don’t really enjoy giving them an unsolicited sauna experience. To combat the heat on this trip I did get a nice Honda generator (which was needed to run daguerreotype equipment anyway) and a floor-standing room-type AC unit. I’m not going to bore you with the baffling details of exactly what it’s doing and how it’s not exactly working, but let’s just say that Chris and I couldn’t figure it out and even thought that the unit I had was defective, and so actually went and picked up a used other one from Craigslist. Nothing worked though, and in later in the day I had to make the daguerreotype of him and his wife in the darkroom that was still 98°. Luckily, I was able to fume the plate in the house darkroom where it was nice and cool. I totally forgot to make a copy of that plate too, just now thought of it…
We departed the next
morning, but not before a small deal was reached, the result of which was me
being a new owner of a hand-made iodine fuming box, plus developing jig and
some nearly 5x7in plates. A few years
ago Christopher did give Becquerel dags a go, but found it wasn’t his thing for
several reasons, and so now I might just make a few B-dags just for fun since I
can’t fit plates that size into my mercury chamber.
That day was
actually Jozlynn’s birthday, but there were plans to be fulfilled and it turned
out to be mainly a people-meeting day.
We first had to see
Chris Blackburn – another SLC wet plater, who does very good work at events and
in his downtown studio (well, to me it seemed like downtown anyway). Chris had a gallon of Everclear that I had
him buy for me a while back, but which was never shipped, and I need it on this
trip, so this worked out great. Plus we’ve
been online buddies for quite some time, and I’ve heard a lot about his from
Conrad Young, a San Diego wet plate buddy of mine whose family is in SLC, so it
was great to finally meet him and see in person his wonderful large gelatin cyanotypes
on glass backed with gold leaf – incredible!
Next on the agenda
was a lunch with Charles Trentelman in Ogden, 40min north of SLC. Charles and I became bonded online a while
back over our shared passion for old cameras in general and for Minox spy
cameras in particular. Charles used to be in journalism, but now is retired and
spends his time making great images and volunteering at the Ogden train museum. To lunch he brought a local
friend of his who used to run a camera shop in Long Beach CA, before retiring
10 years ago in Utah.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> brought a wonderful
gift – additional vintage process books for Photo Palace library. There’s one on carbro there, one on bromoil,
one on general negatives and more. We
had a wonderful lunch a small local diner on 25th street and then
headed to a hotel, before a dinner at a great local Italian place called Zucca.
After dinner, we met yet another photographer –
Hanako Murakami. Hanako is Japanese
living in France and her work is very medium-oriented. Currently she’s experimenting with Becquerel
daguerreotypes, and actually I met her through Luther Gerlach, who a couple of
weeks ago recommended me to her for a small workshop and some
trouble-shooting. After Hanako came
though San Diego, she headed to Nevada for an artist residency, but we happened
to be in Ogden at the same time (as she was on her way to see Spiral Jetty in
Great Salt Lake), so it was great to meet up again and see the work we both did
since the last time.
Next day was a
relaxation day. After breakfast with
Hanako and her partner, Jozlynn went exploring the town and shopping, while I hunkered
down in a quaint little coffee shop recommended earlier by Charles and wrote
this blog. That took up most of the
day, but we still had time to make it into the mountains off highway 89, north
of Logan, and find a wonderful camping spot.
I actually saw the road on satellite view of google maps, but neither
did I realize that it’s right next to a brush-covered creek, nor did I see under
the cover of leafs the ultimate Gilli-sized parking spot with fire pit and waterfall
just 20 feet away. I am sitting here
now, watching the last logs in the fire die turn to ambers and listening to the
water rush in the creek. Tomorrow the plan is to make a dag or two here (size
to be determined), then two 4x5 tintypes, then move 500ft up the road to
another for an 8x10 tintype or two.
Jozlynn wants to make one too, so we’ll see how well she remembers the
steps after about a year since making her last plate. It’s well past midnight, fire is out, I’m off
to the tent…
Next morning our
tent was in the shade and by a beautiful little waterfall, so we slept in a bit… Still a nice little ¼ plate daguerreotypes
was made and then a couple of 4x5 tintypes.
This post is being uploaded from the shores of Bear Lake, UT. It's around sunset and we're hoping to find a picturesque camping spot just north of Idaho border. Hope you enjoyed the read.
Anton
Anton
P.S. Daguerreotypes
are had to photograph with a phone, so sorry for image quality… Once back home I’ll copy all the plates
properly and make a separate post with just the keepers.
I devoured this latest blag piece. Imagine Peter looking over your shoulder as you photographed Michael and the farm and the family with his very own camera. Yes, full circle for all of us. Are you coming back through? By the way, it's either Peterson or Petersen, not Patterson!
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