Image is everything
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Paul Saitowitz
Photographer Michael Eastman lives in the moment ... and then he goes
and relives that moment time and time again. First in person, then on
spiraling rolls of celluloid and finally in larger-than-life prints.
“It’s the immediacy of photography, the way to catch something at
the particular time and space that has always drawn me to it,” he
said. “There really is nothing else like it. I mean, what could be
better than a 60th of a second.”
Eastman became enamored with the moments of life Walker Evans
captured in the 1950s and wanted to venture to a place where he could
encapsulate moments of his own in a similar vain.
The Communist, impoverished scenes of certain neighborhoods in
Havana, Cuba, remain essentially unchanged from the way they appeared
five decades ago. Enter Eastman.
Between 1999 and 2002, he made three trips to the city.
“It was just a place that showed what life was like back in 1952,
and that was exactly what I was looking for,” he said. “It was like
stepping back in time.”
After shooting thousands of images during that period, Eastman
spent months editing the shots down. Just 10 will be on display at
the SCAPE gallery in Corona del Mar.
“I decided to shoot as much as I possibly could and then worry
about editing later,” he said. “These 10 images are really all that
is needed. They sum up what I was trying to convey in my experiences
there.”
The photos feature living rooms, bedrooms, kitchens and foyers of
homes built for aristocrats as early as the 1860s in an area of
Havana known as “Embassy Row.” Most of the houses are mansions built
by former sugar cane and tobacco barons.
Although they now seem hopelessly decrepit -- many of the homes
are in virtual ruins -- the starkness of the juxtaposition of an
edifice untouched by time with an interior that shows nothing but
time resounds.
One image depicts a room with an opulent chandelier that takes up
most of the ceiling with two formerly exquisite armchairs -- now
falling apart -- underneath it. The walls are crumbling, and a
laundry line with clothes on it is strewn across the room to show
that the house is still inhabited.
In addition to capturing the essence of an era gone by, the photos
underscore that poverty-stricken people now call former mansions
their homes.
“One of the houses just had a gaping hole right in the middle of
the roof,” Eastman said. “It was amazing the building was still
standing.”
Some of the locations for the photos were planned, but he gained
access to most of the shots by simply knocking on doors.
“The people there are really great,” he said. “They were very
accommodating to me. They may not love our government, but they love
Americans.”
Eastman’s “Cuba” will open Saturday night at SCAPE and will run
until Oct. 16.
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