The title is sensational but it's borrowed from many media outlets, the real story is far more complex. I hope you enjoy this video. A major thank you to our sponsor exposure for sponsoring a segment of this video, if you want to check out my stories talking about how I put my first book together and my travels check it out here: tatianahopper.exposure.co/from-egypt-to-south-of-france
Just wanted to say thank you for introducing me to this photographer and his exceptional work! Your storytelling was also fantastic, he seems a fascinating character.
Terrific mini documentary here on a fascinating photographer. Sometimes I think if it wasn't for the internet, we never would've known about photographers Masahisa Fukase. His life story reminds me fo the 1989 Japanese film 'Black Rain' (not the one starring Michael Douglas) about a Japanese family trying to remain true too the social mores of the time, even after their country suffered a devastating attack and unbelievable losses. The photo at 2:56 is a personal favorite. The cat singing a debut with the singer on television is priceless. As with late poet Edgar Allan Poe, Fukase seemed to embrace melancholia the same way one embraces a lover. Several of Fukase's photographic projects such as his family portraits as 'archiving death' and photographing his still born child is what some would consider questionable. To quote an old military saying, 'if sailor/solider believes they're going to die in combat, that person will find a way to make if happen'. It seems to be true of Masahisa Fukase. It's unfortunate Fukase suffered that head injured which ended his photographic career. Perhaps his photos might be inspiration to future artists.
This resonates with me so deeply. My narcissistic ex-girlfriend told me before I left her 4 years ago and destroyed my life that "your camera is creating distance." Even though at the time my lens was primarily pointed at her to capture and show her the beauty I saw and to capture our moments together. I asked her after I left her what she meant and why she said it and she said she didn't know, that she loves photographers and that he current boyfriends were so jealous of the photos I made of her... It's been years and it's like I am addicted to the poison that she is, but at least I am back in college, even though I am 39, and one year through the commercial photography program. I want an MFA or a PHD eventually. It is true I am in love with photography, I too went through a phase in 2021-22 when I was photographing the massive murders of crows over Portland Oregon. There would be hundreds if not thousands of them flying in massive black clouds over the Willamette River to sleep in the trees along the waterfront. The cacophony of cawing was so loud as they settled into their branches.
I’m always in awe of the videos you put out!! The photographers that you showcase and their art. This one is one of your best!!!! I’ve never heard of this gentleman or really 70% of the artists that you enlighten me with. But I’m so glad that you do!!! Thank you so very much and I hope that you will continue to do so! Best wishes always!!!!!
Thank you so much Terry I really appreciate it and I’m happy to be able to introduce different artists to the audience, thanks for the support and kind words!
Thank you for this very interesting and well made video. I am not that familiar with Fukase's work but am inspired to explore it. The quotations about Fukase are especially nice.
Thank you for giving it a watch, it’s worth to dive deeper I would in particular either recommend the monograph I used in this video which reunites different images and projects he worked on during his life and of course “Ravens” which is a staple.
Though I have never heard of him before I'm very impressed with his body of work, however I'm saddened to see how his last days were spent. Thank you Tatiana for the introduction to his work and another excellent video. ❤😎
I know it’s quite a sad ending for such a life full of emotion, events, photos and creativity. I suppose life isn’t meant to be fair but at the end of the day we have his amazing work to represent his artistic capabilities!
Thanks for this. Fukase is one of my favorite photographers and Ravens one of my favorite books. He greatly influenced my feelings and approach to photography. Some of his phots are banal, but so many are deeply moving.
HOLY SHIT !!! this is an artist that was so ffff far ahead of the world of photographic art !!!!! I feel that photography kept him alive, gave him life. This is the purest of story telling, fine art , pure art in my opinion. I is jarring, breath taking, beautiful dark happy simple and complex I am left gobsmacked !
Glad you enjoy his work David, definitely worth a more closer look if you're interested, I left some links and book references in the description, thank you for watching!
great overview, thank you. I never got the "destructive" perspective of photography on his life. he was an artist and it was his joy. He may have been dark but that doesn't equal the negative aspects that some might try to conflate.
Totally, I think a lot needs to be put into context because I don’t think it should be necessary viewed negatively, thanks for your comment and for giving it a watch.
Wow. That was a stunning episode, solidly written and composed to frame some awesome images. The highlight for me was the images from the Solitude series, which I didn't read as depressive (although Fukase obviously was) but inspiring, because despite his state, he was able to produce his most compelling work. Not exactly surprising that he was derailed by alcohol and stairs, but to linger for that long afterwards, seems so random. Or did his "revenge play against life" with photography in wishing to "stop the world" inspire life to exact it's own revenge against him, and make him almost like a static image with a 20 year coma? 😕
@@TatianaHopper Before we go any further ,I think it's time to put Ms. Hopper in the spotlight for her unfailing and stupendous choice in videos ! One always learns so much it is uncanny ! Carry on Ms.Hopper ! (And now back to the program )
Great video. Yes, some colleagues went through a complex and painful life, not always for been photographer, no matter what they have done for paying the bills. I agree with you, photography was a lifeboat in his own way.
Intriguing is a great word, I think that was how I felt when I first heard of his story, I was intrigued because I just knew it wasn't as simple as media outlets were portraying him and his story to be.
I frankly had no idea with the body of works of Masahisa Fukase. My latest works of photography feels home for me with the works of Fukase, Morimaya, Winogrand, Mary Ellen Mark, Cohen, and Meyeroitz. And then therese my acquaintance from high school I went back on Guam in 2011 to 2014. Making pictures of people without consent is my photography style I actually felt the most comfortable with. My discomfort comes way more on how people getting self-concious rather than me being anxious entirely. I would my photograph my journey as "His Little Way" to give back to the community and the metro Seattle. I really dedicated my style and body of work as a street photographer to Alexandra's black one-piece bathing suit! People will not understand my current body of work with my camera; but she once told me to hold my head high. This shoot was photographer portrait photographer while still living on Guam. But the way that she came out on these shoots; has my mind rent-free. So much things that I cannot properly explain. I might be starting to hear the electrical noise on electrical lines with my pumping heart... The combination of the vibes of Serial Experiments Lain, Mary Ellen Mark, and Alexandra's Black Bikini shoots has me decided not to pursue the traditional portrait and client photoshoots! While photographing the homeless and the mentally ill on the streets in Downtown Seattle often.
Kudos for attempting, purposefully or not, to correct and preserve his legacy. He is too often portrayed as an obsessed stalker to his wives. As a mentally broken artist. He was complex. He was damaged by life. He tried to cope. As artist, everything that manifests is in some way a coping mechanism. He was genius at coping. Genius.
That’s precisely how I tried to depict him and his photography as a way of coping with life in general. He was very complex and I don’t think the portrayal he is given very often is fair. At least from my humble opinion. Best!
Thanks again for a beautifully produced and thought provoking video. Why people think like that I don’t know. I mean you could say that about people who engage in activities where they actually risk their lives but photography as a death wish is about as realistic as accountancy. Are photographers more likely to be alcoholic misanthropes? Is it just Japanese photographers? Is it to do with the war, or growing up in a cold, isolated place like Hokkaido? I think he was a photographer who had a certain personality that drove his photography in a certain direction. He wanted to use photography almost purely as self expression and maybe a way to document his understanding of his culture, the failure of ideas and technology to improve the world. Rather than destroying it, if anything, photography probably saved his life and gave it a meaning he could live with. He fell down because of alcohol. If he’d been a heavy smoker who died of cancer no one would have thought of saying photography destroyed his life.
Very fascinating. Taking into account the total symbology/archetype of ravens in Japanese culture, it seems appropriate he sub- consciously chose ravens as an arcatypical running theme. Carl Jung would be proud.
Yes I think it makes sense that's why I tried to understand what they really mean or if their meaning is somehow different to what is that in my western culture. Jung, Freud and all the gang ahah.
Will you make a video of Araki? Even though he's somewhat controversial I think his life's work is worth covering. Moriyama Daido is another photographer definitely worth a close look.
I went to see his exhibition at the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum. It was nice. You did a great portrait video, as always. This year, I went to see an exhibition by another Japanese photographer, Yasui Nakaji. Maybe you know him. I hope you can make a portrait of this avant-garde Japanese artist in the future.
I have a personal question, I've been told that I should have a written statement introducing my essays "photo series" for people to read about the "back" story of the images. I have been reluctant to do so as I want the viewer to interact the images on a personal level related to their life experiences emotions, not to try and see them from "my" perspective. What is your recomendation thank you for stepping outside the lines on this but with your obvious talent at story telling and photography your thoughts are of value to me
I mean when you think about it, everything has an introduction when you go to an exhibition there’s a brief introduction printed somewhere in the beginning, same with most books, if it doesn’t work for you because you don’t want people’s vision to be influenced why don’t you just write an afterword. That way you still have something to present to people but after they’ve seen the photos you presented.
Finished the video I mean his story is quite sad but at the same time I do agree that perhaps with everything put into context he wasn’t necessarily “obsessed” with anything, who knows. I liked the narrative very much, not sure about some of the photos just not very keen on his style but still appreciate it. Cheers for Thailand currently!
@@TatianaHopper yeah, it’s more like three notes away (and in a different key) but it’s still so close, I had to go and listen before coming back to the video, sorry lol.
There's something about seeing the work of a someone laid out like that. He put his entire soul and being into his art, and though his life is objectively heartbreaking, he sought out beauty to describe it. The beauty in the people and places he loved, and even the beauty in the capturing of all the ugly things. The stillborn, the ravens, the suffering animals. He had an eye for the things that resonate.
Blanking out breasts in these images is indicative of American puritanical idiocy. It’s great and reassuring to see photographers from a range of cultures. Thanks for the video
@@TatianaHopper Yes you must comply. UA-cam is American owned. Artistic expression is stifled by a nation and its companies that maintain they have freedom of expression in one of their constitutional amendments. The rest of the world see’s the absurdity of their ‘constitutional rights’ vs their censorship. Thanks for the video. I will subscribe to your channel. 0:30
The title is sensational but it's borrowed from many media outlets, the real story is far more complex. I hope you enjoy this video.
A major thank you to our sponsor exposure for sponsoring a segment of this video, if you want to check out my stories talking about how I put my first book together and my travels check it out here: tatianahopper.exposure.co/from-egypt-to-south-of-france
Glad to see you posting more on there Hopper!
There is a movie coming out.
ua-cam.com/video/GX2PGXwB8nI/v-deo.html
Just wanted to say thank you for introducing me to this photographer and his exceptional work! Your storytelling was also fantastic, he seems a fascinating character.
Thank you so much, glad you appreciate it.
Thank you for all those beautiful stories you tell us about known and not so well known photographers.
Thank you so much for the donation and for the kind words, I appreciate your support and I’m glad to be able to bring these stories to you!
Honestly this might be one of your best videos. I'm a big fan of Japanese photography so I'm biased but still please bring more!
Thank you! I appreciate the support biased or not ahah
@@TatianaHopper 😅
Terrific mini documentary here on a fascinating photographer. Sometimes I think if it wasn't for the internet, we never would've known about photographers Masahisa Fukase. His life story reminds me fo the 1989 Japanese film 'Black Rain' (not the one starring Michael Douglas) about a Japanese family trying to remain true too the social mores of the time, even after their country suffered a devastating attack and unbelievable losses. The photo at 2:56 is a personal favorite. The cat singing a debut with the singer on television is priceless. As with late poet Edgar Allan Poe, Fukase seemed to embrace melancholia the same way one embraces a lover. Several of Fukase's photographic projects such as his family portraits as 'archiving death' and photographing his still born child is what some would consider questionable. To quote an old military saying, 'if sailor/solider believes they're going to die in combat, that person will find a way to make if happen'. It seems to be true of Masahisa Fukase. It's unfortunate Fukase suffered that head injured which ended his photographic career. Perhaps his photos might be inspiration to future artists.
This resonates with me so deeply. My narcissistic ex-girlfriend told me before I left her 4 years ago and destroyed my life that "your camera is creating distance." Even though at the time my lens was primarily pointed at her to capture and show her the beauty I saw and to capture our moments together. I asked her after I left her what she meant and why she said it and she said she didn't know, that she loves photographers and that he current boyfriends were so jealous of the photos I made of her... It's been years and it's like I am addicted to the poison that she is, but at least I am back in college, even though I am 39, and one year through the commercial photography program. I want an MFA or a PHD eventually. It is true I am in love with photography, I too went through a phase in 2021-22 when I was photographing the massive murders of crows over Portland Oregon. There would be hundreds if not thousands of them flying in massive black clouds over the Willamette River to sleep in the trees along the waterfront. The cacophony of cawing was so loud as they settled into their branches.
Another wonderfully interesting video, thanks Tatania! I didn't know anything about Fukase, nice to discover his work and story.
This is beautifully written, and your experiences would make a beautiful photo book. 🙏🏼
I’m always in awe of the videos you put out!! The photographers that you showcase and their art. This one is one of your best!!!!
I’ve never heard of this gentleman or really 70% of the artists that you enlighten me with. But I’m so glad that you do!!! Thank you so very much and I hope that you will continue to do so! Best wishes always!!!!!
Thank you so much Terry I really appreciate it and I’m happy to be able to introduce different artists to the audience, thanks for the support and kind words!
Just beautifully put together with some lovely theories and insights into his life. Really appreciated this Tatiana.
Thank you so much, I really appreciate it.
Mind-blowing work! Please keep producing these videos. Thank you so much!!!
Thank you for watching!
Aesthetically beautiful, well structured and informative. Thanks for sharing this one.
Thank you so much for watching!
Incredible! A very caring and insightful piece. Would love to see more like this.
Thank you so much, more on the way :)
Thank you for this very interesting and well made video. I am not that familiar with Fukase's work but am inspired to explore it. The quotations about Fukase are especially nice.
If you can, get your hands on his photobooks. Ravens is exemplary.
Thank you for giving it a watch, it’s worth to dive deeper I would in particular either recommend the monograph I used in this video which reunites different images and projects he worked on during his life and of course “Ravens” which is a staple.
As always, truly grateful for the opportunity to learn from your work. Thank you!
Thank you so much Darryl!
You are so good at what you do 😊another incredibly well informed video and visually stunning!
Thank you so much I really appreciate it and thanks for being a member! 👍🏻
Though I have never heard of him before I'm very impressed with his body of work, however I'm saddened to see how his last days were spent. Thank you Tatiana for the introduction to his work and another excellent video. ❤😎
I know it’s quite a sad ending for such a life full of emotion, events, photos and creativity. I suppose life isn’t meant to be fair but at the end of the day we have his amazing work to represent his artistic capabilities!
Thanks for this. Fukase is one of my favorite photographers and Ravens one of my favorite books. He greatly influenced my feelings and approach to photography. Some of his phots are banal, but so many are deeply moving.
I agree, these images can strike a cord I would say particularly ravens, thank you for watching!
Another wonderfully interesting video, thanks Tatiana! I didn't know anything about Fukase, nice to discover his work and story.
Thank you so much Alan! Appreciate it! 🤍
Beautiful work Tati, thank you for sharing.
Thank you for watching, appreciate it as always!
HOLY SHIT !!! this is an artist that was so ffff far ahead of the world of photographic art !!!!! I feel that photography kept him alive, gave him life. This is the purest of story telling, fine art , pure art in my opinion. I is jarring, breath taking, beautiful dark happy simple and complex I am left gobsmacked !
Glad you enjoy his work David, definitely worth a more closer look if you're interested, I left some links and book references in the description, thank you for watching!
This was a great video. Thanks for doing these. I appreciate them greatly and assume many other people do!
Thank you Gary! Appreciate the kind words.
great overview, thank you. I never got the "destructive" perspective of photography on his life. he was an artist and it was his joy. He may have been dark but that doesn't equal the negative aspects that some might try to conflate.
Totally, I think a lot needs to be put into context because I don’t think it should be necessary viewed negatively, thanks for your comment and for giving it a watch.
Great presentation. Thank you!
Wow. That was a stunning episode, solidly written and composed to frame some awesome images. The highlight for me was the images from the Solitude series, which I didn't read as depressive (although Fukase obviously was) but inspiring, because despite his state, he was able to produce his most compelling work. Not exactly surprising that he was derailed by alcohol and stairs, but to linger for that long afterwards, seems so random. Or did his "revenge play against life" with photography in wishing to "stop the world" inspire life to exact it's own revenge against him, and make him almost like a static image with a 20 year coma? 😕
Thanks for another source of inspiration! I'm fascinated by the work of Japanese artists that I am discovering through this channel.
i had the pleasure of seeing fukase's work in tokyo in 2023. such a fascinating story albeit a terribly sad one. RIP Sir i feel your pain
Agreed! Thank you for watching.
Excellent episode Tatiana !❤
Thank you so much 🤍
@@TatianaHopper Before we go any further ,I think it's time to put Ms. Hopper in the spotlight for her unfailing and stupendous choice in videos ! One always learns so much it is uncanny ! Carry on Ms.Hopper ! (And now back to the program )
Grateful for your words, thank you! 🙏🏻
Great video. Yes, some colleagues went through a complex and painful life, not always for been photographer, no matter what they have done for paying the bills. I agree with you, photography was a lifeboat in his own way.
Thanks for watching Claudio!
Thank you once again for your interesting and inspiring videos.
Thank you for watching 🙏🏻
Photography didn't destroy his life. Photography was his life.
Precisely my point.
Excellent work. Love to learn about these photographers.
Thank you so much, glad you enjoyed these videos!
Your videos are a breath of fresh air in contrast to all the gear reviews on UA-cam.
Thank you so much Dave, appreciate you for watching!
Great video, thanks! greetings from Buenos Aires, Argentina
Greetings to Buenos Aires, thank you for watching!
Thank you ❤
Thank you 🤍
Fantastic video. Thank you for your work.
Both beautiful and sad ❤ great video as usual x
Thank you Sadie! 🤍
One of the more intriguing photographers I’ve seen on your channel. My type of photographer; can’t believe I’ve never heard of him before 😲
Intriguing is a great word, I think that was how I felt when I first heard of his story, I was intrigued because I just knew it wasn't as simple as media outlets were portraying him and his story to be.
this is the first time I've cried over an UA-cam video, excellent work Tatiana!
Thank you so much for watching Dante. Best to you!
I frankly had no idea with the body of works of Masahisa Fukase. My latest works of photography feels home for me with the works of Fukase, Morimaya, Winogrand, Mary Ellen Mark, Cohen, and Meyeroitz. And then therese my acquaintance from high school I went back on Guam in 2011 to 2014. Making pictures of people without consent is my photography style I actually felt the most comfortable with. My discomfort comes way more on how people getting self-concious rather than me being anxious entirely. I would my photograph my journey as "His Little Way" to give back to the community and the metro Seattle.
I really dedicated my style and body of work as a street photographer to Alexandra's black one-piece bathing suit! People will not understand my current body of work with my camera; but she once told me to hold my head high. This shoot was photographer portrait photographer while still living on Guam. But the way that she came out on these shoots; has my mind rent-free. So much things that I cannot properly explain. I might be starting to hear the electrical noise on electrical lines with my pumping heart...
The combination of the vibes of Serial Experiments Lain, Mary Ellen Mark, and Alexandra's Black Bikini shoots has me decided not to pursue the traditional portrait and client photoshoots! While photographing the homeless and the mentally ill on the streets in Downtown Seattle often.
Very interesting and stimulating. Appreciate your work. Regards.
Thank you Bernard!
Kudos for attempting, purposefully or not, to correct and preserve his legacy. He is too often portrayed as an obsessed stalker to his wives. As a mentally broken artist. He was complex. He was damaged by life. He tried to cope. As artist, everything that manifests is in some way a coping mechanism. He was genius at coping. Genius.
That’s precisely how I tried to depict him and his photography as a way of coping with life in general. He was very complex and I don’t think the portrayal he is given very often is fair. At least from my humble opinion. Best!
@TatianaHopper beautiful tribute! This and Moriyama episodes are very well done! Excellent, thoughtfully edited. Keep up the great work!
Thanks again for a beautifully produced and thought provoking video. Why people think like that I don’t know. I mean you could say that about people who engage in activities where they actually risk their lives but photography as a death wish is about as realistic as accountancy. Are photographers more likely to be alcoholic misanthropes? Is it just Japanese photographers? Is it to do with the war, or growing up in a cold, isolated place like Hokkaido? I think he was a photographer who had a certain personality that drove his photography in a certain direction. He wanted to use photography almost purely as self expression and maybe a way to document his understanding of his culture, the failure of ideas and technology to improve the world. Rather than destroying it, if anything, photography probably saved his life and gave it a meaning he could live with. He fell down because of alcohol. If he’d been a heavy smoker who died of cancer no one would have thought of saying photography destroyed his life.
Thank you Hopper for another beautiful video.
Thank you for watching!
Fantastic story! Thank you very much for that 🤩
Thank you so much for watching 🤝🏻
Very fascinating. Taking into account the total symbology/archetype of ravens in Japanese culture, it seems appropriate he sub- consciously chose ravens as an arcatypical running theme. Carl Jung would be proud.
Yes I think it makes sense that's why I tried to understand what they really mean or if their meaning is somehow different to what is that in my western culture. Jung, Freud and all the gang ahah.
I have complete empathy with this photographer ❤
Fascinating. Thank you.
Thank you 🙏🏻
Really love his crow and bathtub images, this was a good one to follow along to
Thanks for watching Kevin.
great video. I learned so much tonight. thank you!!! :)
Thank you so much! 🤝🏻
Thanks for introducing me to a photographer with whom I was not familiar.
Thank you Scott!
Thanks for the exciting documentary. I had never heard of him before.
Thanks for watching Thomas!
i really wish your videos were longer. great content, i always immediatly click on your videos
Thank you so much! I appreciate it 🤝🏻
Well done. Tatiana, one of your best.
Thank you Jay!
Thank you for a fascinating video. Wonderful.
RS. Canada
Thank you so much Richard! Appreciate it!
Almost cried looking at the brief slaughterhouse photos. How horrific and sad.
Great video. Thanks for sharing it!
Thank you for watching!
Will you make a video of Araki? Even though he's somewhat controversial I think his life's work is worth covering. Moriyama Daido is another photographer definitely worth a close look.
I’ve made a video on Moriyana already you can find it somewhere in the channel, Araki is a maybe, he has been on my list for a while, good shout!
@@TatianaHopper From what I've heard, Araki is nearing his end, so this might be a good time to cover his life's work.
Oh I didn’t know that. I’ll do a quick search and see what I can find, cheers Zane!
@@TatianaHopper I hope to hear back on what you find, and do. Cheers to you as well.
Let’s go, intro is already 🔥
Thank you 🤝🏻
I went to see his exhibition at the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum. It was nice. You did a great portrait video, as always. This year, I went to see an exhibition by another Japanese photographer, Yasui Nakaji. Maybe you know him. I hope you can make a portrait of this avant-garde Japanese artist in the future.
Well done, T! ❤
Thank you Nino! 🤍
Awesome, I just started reading up on this guy
Great timing!
I have a personal question, I've been told that I should have a written statement introducing my essays "photo series" for people to read about the "back" story of the images. I have been reluctant to do so as I want the viewer to interact the images on a personal level related to their life experiences emotions, not to try and see them from "my" perspective. What is your recomendation thank you for stepping outside the lines on this but with your obvious talent at story telling and photography your thoughts are of value to me
I mean when you think about it, everything has an introduction when you go to an exhibition there’s a brief introduction printed somewhere in the beginning, same with most books, if it doesn’t work for you because you don’t want people’s vision to be influenced why don’t you just write an afterword. That way you still have something to present to people but after they’ve seen the photos you presented.
@TatianaHopper excellent idea, hadn't thought of that and mull it over to see how I can make it work. obrigado! from Braga Portugal
Finished the video I mean his story is quite sad but at the same time I do agree that perhaps with everything put into context he wasn’t necessarily “obsessed” with anything, who knows. I liked the narrative very much, not sure about some of the photos just not very keen on his style but still appreciate it. Cheers for Thailand currently!
Thank you for your input I’m glad you kept an open mind and still watched it despite maybe the style of photography not being for you, best !
That intro song is a agonizingly close to binary sunset, like a single note away. Almost hurts not to hear it go to that note.
You mean the John Williams one?
@@TatianaHopper yeah, it’s more like three notes away (and in a different key) but it’s still so close, I had to go and listen before coming back to the video, sorry lol.
It’s okay 👍🏻
Great video!
thank you
There's something about seeing the work of a someone laid out like that. He put his entire soul and being into his art, and though his life is objectively heartbreaking, he sought out beauty to describe it. The beauty in the people and places he loved, and even the beauty in the capturing of all the ugly things. The stillborn, the ravens, the suffering animals. He had an eye for the things that resonate.
Very interesting.
Thank you!
Obsessed with this guy...thank you
Thank you 🫶🏻
This was so well done - I’m even - dare I say it? Interested in today’s sponsor…
Thank you for giving the video a watch Richard, appreciate it, all info is in the description :)
Thank you so much. this is my favourite piece you have made. Wonderful.
Thank you for taking your time to watch this. I appreciate it!
❤
Blanking out breasts in these images is indicative of American puritanical idiocy. It’s great and reassuring to see photographers from a range of cultures. Thanks for the video
It’s something we do to not have the video censored by UA-cam itself, you can thank them 🤝🏻
@@TatianaHopper Yes you must comply. UA-cam is American owned. Artistic expression is stifled by a nation and its companies that maintain they have freedom of expression in one of their constitutional amendments. The rest of the world see’s the absurdity of their ‘constitutional rights’ vs their censorship. Thanks for the video. I will subscribe to your channel. 0:30
Cool Beans
Photography on review, not the gear... I hope a good photography school makes you an offer for your fine work.
Thank you 🙏🏻
FU-ka-se
Brownie points for Frank Zappa here.
Thank you for a fascinating video. Wonderful.
RS. Canada
Thank you for taking your time to watch it Richard, appreciate it!