The Great Tunafish Expedition, Probably 1973

[Excerpted from a posting originally intended for my photo blog]

It all started with the Banquet Camera. Kodak (and others like Folmer-Schwing) made these things during the latter part of the 19th century and well into the 20th. Bill found one somewhere in a back room of a camera store in Lakewood, if I recall. Bill, my old photography sidekick and surfing/auto racing/sports magazine shutter for hire, is pictured here in portraits I made in Arizona in 1973 and while shooting in Death Valley in 1976.

And while we are at it, here is a most wonderful image captured of Bill in 2004 by one of his Los Angeles shooter friends, whose name I do not recall.
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Bill’s Banquet Camera was a large wooden view camera requiring film in the 10×20 (or was it 12×20?, and that’s inches) format, and was literally designed to photograph large groups in banquet halls in a single panoramic view.  Some examples follow; thanks Google!

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Bill put all of his natural and acquired skills together — from his experience as a camera repair person for a large camera store in Long Beach to that of serving as a (sometimes ride-along) helicopter mechanic in VietNam — and sufficiently restored the beast to an operational state. The rub was that he had no film for it, but he contacted Eastman Kodak, still alive and well and thriving in Rochester, New York and was told they would look into the matter. When he received a callback in a couple of days advising that they did indeed have some old stock and were willing to negotiate a price, we hit upon a plan to drive there as soon as possible and retrieve the stuff, and shoot large-format all the way home.

Some of you may recall that Bill was head photographer for International Surfing Magazine when I met him in 1968 or 69 or 70. Growing up in Long Beach near the coast and with a father who headed up the aircraft maintenance department at Long Beach Airport, Bill was into both flying and surfing. And somehow photography came along as that was the only thing he liked in school. As we realized that we needed another person to split the cost of gas to New York, we approached Michael, a surfer and appreciator, but non-participant, in things photographic. He agreed, on the condition that we would take surfboards and hit the waves on the East Coast. So as Bill and Michael started planning a surfing itinerary, I made contact with a group of photographers I knew in upstate New York who transformed a farm there into a photography and art education-oriented commune, thereby establishing my way of spending three or four weeks while the others would crawl the East Coast looking for the Big One.

I serviced my 1971 VW camper in anticipation of the trek, and we started accumulating a few necessities to take along. Turned out that a friend of Bill who often dropped into Bill’s studio/darkroom was a State of California employee charged with inspection of food processing facilities. This guy would come by with his longhaired Afgan Hound, grooming the thing while having a beer with us and seeming to hope that we would photograph the dog (which did happen), and regaling us with horror stories of food processing observations. When he learned that we were planning a cross-country trip on a tight budget, he dropped off something that he had been given (was it a bribe? a remainder?) at his most recent inspection gig. It was a case of Chicken of the Sea tuna in oil, which he suggested would stow easily in the VW.
1973-08-04-35-Edit Colorized
By the time we reached Texas, we had become so repulsed by the stuff that we vowed never to touch it again — ever. Nevertheless, we kept the unopened cans in the event of some sort of emergency — we did consider this a perilous, high risk journey — but when we broke down and desperately opened some in, was it New Jersey, the smell almost instantly sickened all of us.

So we ultimately made it to Rochester and bought film, but it was too hard to manage on the road in our cramped transport.  Thus we only photographed with 35mm cameras and a “small” 4×5 view camera. Tons of photographs were actually taken throughout the trip, but for now I can only locate ones documenting small portions of the junket. Bill and Michael went on to surf in places like Cape Cod, while I dived deeply into photography at the upstate commune (I know that I have some negatives on that). Here are some evidences of activity  in and around Washington, D.C., on our approach leg, most of questionable value:

Also we have some mostly nondescript images from New York and on into New England. I should mention that we did something that would be almost unimaginable in this era. We solved the difficulty of finding camping grounds in NYC by driving out to the La Guardia airport parking lot at night, drawing lots to see which lucky person would sleep inside the bus and which two underneath it. Our time there was brief, despite my desire to spend more time in arguably my favorite city in the US, but Bill and Michael wanted to push on to drop me off upstate so they could get cracking in the surf.

More to follow, almost certainly, but don’t expect any coherent order or even decent image quality.

The Gingles Farm, 1973

Doc Gingles was our family doctor for a period during my childhood. He was a rotund, jolly character with an exceptional bedside manner (he used to remind me of Burl Ives, for those old enough to recollect that folk singer; he reminded others of Santa Claus; my sister, if I recall, was terrified of him). The doctor and his sister (unlike her brother, she was a stern, humorless person) were wealthy property owners in the county.

Around 1950, my parents rented a sizeable farm from the Gingles sister in the river valley and surrounding hills across from the tiny town of Castana, Iowa. We lived there for a few years during an era of much significance — the summer of polio, the Korean War, the rise of Stalin’s brand of Communism, among others — all riveting to the mind of a youngster, pre-adolescent, pre-teen.

On a VW bus trip across the US in 1973 with two photographer friends, we made a side trip to revisit the scene. We found that the farm buildings had been long abandoned and were seriously deteriorated, fences had been removed, weeds and brush had overgrown the house yard and outbuildings. The house, I was to learn during my childhood when I discovered a history of Monona County in the local library, was the oldest frame house in the county. For awhile, I was afraid to climb the dark, narrow stairs to the third floor, but in time I came to have my own room there with cardboard cutouts of airplanes I designed and hung from the ceiling. My brother and I also discovered dozens of rolls of wallpaper stored in the attic which we retrieved and spread in six to ten foot lengths across the living room and hallway floors so that we could create our own large-scale comic strips. The long dining-living room had a large fireplace (seen at the extreme edge of one of the below photos), where we might sit to read about Greek and Roman gods in our encyclopedia volumes, and also accommodated the dining table on which we used to play ping-pong. In the same room sat a wood-cabinet floor model of radio/record player where I could hear The Lone Ranger and The Shadow and sometimes play my mother’s recordings of classical music, carefully avoiding the overtly religious material. Eventually a piano was added to the room.

The flat acreage between the buildings and the river was mostly given to crops of corn and alfalfa. In the hills beyond the house were more tillable fields and immediately over the crest west of the house was a large, densely timbered series of increasingly steep hills extending a couple of miles further and enclosing a deep, winding creek with the occasional meadow of butterflies, gooseberries, thickets, tall weeds and grass and make-believe Indian encampments. The Gingles farm came with a large and valuable herd of above-average and rather prized cattle (how many? 30? 50?), and my brother and I had to seek them out in this wooded area that served as their pasture and bring them in for milking every day. Running roughly parallel to the twisting creek was a dirt side road that reached deep into the woods and hills where the truly less prosperous “hill farmers” lived. I would ride my bicycle (after I learned to ride by circling the three-story farmhouse repeatedly) up the road as far as I dared — there was something mysterious and slightly frightening about the dark, tree-shrouded path ahead. And Landlady Gingles would drive her new Pontiac up that road in an attempt to sight and inspect the cattle, usually commanding me or my brother to ride along and answer questions she might have.

At the time of the 1973 trip, I was working mostly with my large format 4×5 view camera, one of those late 19th century/early 20th century wood-and-metal affairs with tripod, lens board on a flexible bellows and one-at-a-time sheet film holders. Those negatives I cannot now find, so far, anyway. But I also made a number of more conventional exposures with my then-modern 35mm camera, and I came upon those this week. What I show here depict the farmhouse and the upper and lower barnyard buildings (the latter were separated by the road that ran just feet from our front door). My memories are of the cows and calves in the upper barnyard, with the older hogs in the adjacent yards behind the barn and near the silo (missing by the time of my photographs were corn cribs and numerous smaller sheds and buildings), while the lower barn was a place for the birthing of litters of pigs and the nexus of two or three yards where younger pigs ran, as well as younger heifers and steers. The bull was at times housed in the lower barn, and once nearly broke through its walls. Chickens also figured in the mix, but I cannot recall exactly where they were situated — I had great contempt and even fear of those birds. I recall one winter during a snowstorm when I had to feed some animals in the lower barn but near white-out conditions made it very challenging to find my way across the road and back to the house.  Another striking memory was of our neighbor, who sang opera arias while driving his tractor, echoing across the valley — he had attended Julliard and his wife was my piano teacher.  I particularly remember hot summer nights when my father would sit with my visiting grandfather and uncles under the then-living and blooming front yard tree on the fenders and running boards of their cars and discuss the North Koreans and Joe McCarthy and Stalin and the price of farm commodities, while the women would remain indoors. Other times at night we could walk out to the cornfields and listen to the corn grow. Here goes:

I suspect that some of my details may be slightly askew, and that my siblings could add to or modify some of this information. So I will try to update this post, if they submit input. By the way, when all siblings reconnected in 2010 for our mother’s funeral, we made a special trip to Castana and the Gingles farm, but this time found it almost completely devoid of all structures and any recognizable features, save the road itself.

In the White Mountains of Arizona (1972-74): More Catness

I told Ivi that I would share any of my dog and cat pix with her as I came upon them, so I guess I will give everybody else a look, too.  Here is Catness/Catt Black, bonding with my engineer staffer, Dave, in the kitchen of my cabin.  Then some later pictures when she encounters my friend Joe’s “Apache” puppy.

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rDay Three-Hundred-Thirty-Seven: Hangout With Ivi

This makes for a perfect day.   Almost an hour and a half, learning that Ivi is housesitting and dogsitting (whoops, didn’t get to capture the brief glimpse of the dog in question, who was resting on the floor beside Ivi); surviving healthily while almost everyone else around her gets colds and flu; dancing as much as she can; and being happy.  She tells us about adventures with Little Lisle and what a fabulous experience she had with Melissa’s immersive theatre performance (where Ivi  was, without warning, the first audience member dragged off by a member of the cast, and mentioned that posters of Melissa in a leather jacket with a Romeo and Juliet tattoo on her bare chest are appearing all around Seattle — we asked for some photo documentation).  And lots more.

In the White Mountains of Arizona (1972-74): More After Hours Music

The absolute best way to socialize after working hours (no, it really wasn’t the Dew Drop Inn) was to get together with musician and music-oriented friends to listen and maybe create some live sounds.  Here, Tucson musician Lynne (you met her earlier) drives us in her Audi (as ID’d by Jamesa!) to meet up in guitarist and my staff member Ron’s cabin.  

This was a very special venue, by the way, as Ron had rented over the winter a summer vacation cabin outside of Pinetop from a university music professor from Phoenix named Fred Sharp.  So, of course, the owner had signage with musical notes at the front gate proclaiming the property as that of … F Sharp.  Once inside, the spacious and highly comfortable cabin was chock full of photos and paintings of cats, framed vintage musical scores and images of composers, and … antique instruments.  One of these instruments was not locked away, and we were given permission to use it (responsibly).  It was a small foot-powered early 1800s German organ!  We immediately conjured up fantasies about how such an organ could have been used in era of Beethoven — the dates just about match.  So we have Lynne, Ron, Jill,  Penni and me taking turns at the keyboard, and occasionally attempting an organ-guitar ensemble mix.  I regret that I didn’t return later with a flash unit to overcome the interior darkness to bring out the details in that incredible organ (which actually looked better than it sounded).

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