Desjar Photography Goes South

For the last year, I have been fortunate enough to have Melissa Desjardins, of Nashua, NH-based Desjar Photography accompany me on all sorts of photoshoots as my photographic assistant. An excellent photographer in her own right, Melissa will be leaving the area soon to establish herself in Richmond, Virginia. We have had a great time, meeting some really interesting people along the way. Her personality is a great asset on a shoot, helping to make subject feel at ease and always being ready with the lights, stands, and all the rest to make my job easier. She will be missed!

 

Recently, Merrimack Valley Magazine's finest posed for a photo together. A rare moment indeed!


Photographers Kevin Harkins, Melissa Desjardins and Adrien Bisson - courtesy of Desjar Photography

A few weeks ago I had offered to photograph Melissa for her newly located business. We created a bunch of headshots, environmental portraits and dramatic portraits. Here are the results, or my favorites anyway. This was a fun shoot!

At the moment, I am assuming that Melissa will keep her current web address, http://www.desjarphoto.com/, but if that changes, I will update this blog post to the correct address.

July 2012 Cover Story for CE Pro Magazine


David Shulman of The Environmental Tech Center - CP Pro Magazine - July 2012

This shoot was a blast. The Environmental Tech Center, in East Boston, which is featured in this month's CE Pro Magazine cover story, is in an unassuming building, but houses some really cool gadgets and an amazing home. David Shulman, who owns the Environmental Tech Center shares the stage in this article with his beautiful home and workplace.

I Need to Blog More Often!

Well, I really dropped the ball. I haven't blogged since May 8th! In my defense, I have been working on many things, but several of them are long term projects or editorial photography, the latter requiring me to hold off showing until publication. So there will be several magazine cover stories to come, as well as a couple of personal projects, to which I can at least give you a sneak preview now.

I am really excited to be working with the United Teen Equality Center (UTEC), in Lowell, Massachusetts, on a summer-long project to document the great work they are doing, and have been doing since 1999. I am really looking forward to creating a significant body of work that will tell UTEC's story. My photographing and learning process has already begun and the plans are for the work to culminate with the Grand Opening of their new, green building, on November 13th. Stay tuned!

And yes, my project called After Hours Passions, with creative genius Suzzanne Cromwell continues!

And if you "Like" the Merrimack Valley Magazine on Facebook, you may have seen this shot. I had the pleasure of covering a two family home construction project in Lawrence that happened in an insane 6 days. I also found This Old House' Steve Thomas to be an inspiring and eloquent speaker on the subject of helping others to succeed.

Commercial Integrator Magazine's May 2012 Issue


Atrion Networking senior VP Paul Cronin, Warwick, R.I.

For the May, 2012 issue of Commercial Integrator Magazine, with its distinctive cover style, I was chosen to photograph Atrion Networking senior VP Paul Cronin, of Warwick, R.I., for the cover story. EH Publishing is a great group to work with.

For more information about editorial photography, corporate photography and location portraits, send me a quick email! http://www.adrienbisson.com/contact/

Teacher Appreciation Week from a Teaching Widower

There is an abundance of misinformation and misplaced ill-will out there concerning the teaching profession. Sadly, most everyone can site an instance in their childhood in which a bad teacher may have affected their lives. I know that such was the case for me. More sadly though, there are people who make it their mission, for whatever reason, to bash teachers, the overwhelming majority of whom are dedicated professionals. While some of the criticism comes from frustrated or resentful individuals who have a right to their opinions, some also comes from more influential individuals and institutions who are using the demeaning of teachers and public education as a means to further their political careers or agendas, or to profit from what they perceive as a potential privatization cash cow.

In the sewer that is the world of web site commentary, a place that desperate traditional media outlets allow to fester, one finds a non-stop diatribe of the bravely anonymous commentators voicing their frustration and resentment of educators. 'Those teachers! They have the summer off! They only work half days! They are paid so much! They have such "lavish" benefits!' You may have heard or read such things if you choose to waste time reading such enlightened prose. As a "teaching widower", let me share with you, as old Larry Glick used to say, "The story behind the story".

My wife is a public elementary school teacher in what Massachusetts likes to call, a gateway city. It's a city with a very divers, working class, often working-poor, population. Her school is one with many low-income students from homes with parents who are possibly from other countries and who often work harder than most to try to "make it" here. She generally leaves the house at about 6:30AM to set off on her 15 minute commute. Let me say that I worked for a very long time in what talk radio likes to call, "the dreaded private sector", where, if one arrived at work at 6:45AM, he or she would be alone for several hours in a dark office. Most of my wife's days at school last until about 4PM, which is followed by an unwinding at the gym. The after-dinner hours are usually spent on the computer struggling with the latest and greatest bureaucratic busywork that may have come down to the worker bees from those who know best. Sometimes these evenings involve grading, lesson planning, calling parents, using our own personal paper and toner, and spending evenings at school talking to parents. Did I mention our paper and toner? Oh, and Saturday mornings?... ditto.

So lets talk about the school year. Yes, teachers get the summer off. (The first week after school is over, my wife sleeps; day and night.) Did I mention that they have the summer off WITHOUT PAY? Many people are under the mistaken impression that the summer is a paid vacation. Um...no. Did I mention that I worked for a long time in the private sector? I have a Bachelor of Music degree. In the corporate world I was a software engineer with a few software engineering courses under my belt and was paid almost exactly twice what my wife was paid at the time, and she has a Masters of Education. And what about those other vacations? Yes, in Massachusetts, teachers get the Christmas break, a February and an April vacation. Most professional people do get paid vacation, albeit far less than is reasonable in this country, IMHO. The big difference is that most professional people can choose when they go on those vacations. I cannot. Did I say "I"? Why yes I did! My wife and I cannot go anywhere when we choose. I would also challenge you to check out airfares during these very popular vacation weeks. Such a perk!

And finally, I am going to throw in only one comment about benefits. When I was in the corporate world, my wife and I always used my health care coverage for both of us because it was much less expensive than hers. I am sure that this is not unusual and that not having to cover a certain percentage of employees is a huge win for the city.

Public education is one of the things that makes this country one worth living in. Public servants, like teachers, do exactly what the name implies; they serve the public. Whether that is you and me specifically or not is irrelevant. We are in this together. The founding fathers knew that. Those who created this "commonwealth" knew that. We can either support the education of children when they are children, making them into citizens who are part of the commonwealth, or we can pay even more to keep them alive in prison as adults. We already have the world's highest incarceration rate [1].

[Now try to visualize me stepping off my soap box please.]

 

(1 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_incarceration_rate)
 

Cover Sandwich - Merrimack Valley magazine

I photograph people. But I sometimes shoot other things! This month's cover of Merrimack Valley Magazine features my food photography. My photos of MassInnovation CEO Robert Ansin for Coffee Talk are shown here as well. These were shot in available light, some of which I brought with me. (sorry for the lighting-geek humor!)


Merrimack Valley Magazine

MassInnovation CEO Robert Ansin

What Not to Light

If you want to make something more interesting, it's important to know what not to light. I know that a great photographer said something like that, but I cannot remember who that was or what his or her exact words were. It's a phrase that I think about constantly though. One of my new favorite shadow creator combinations is a beauty dish with a grid. Soft, fairly large, but most of all, very constrained. I would say it is easily disciplined.

Here are a couple of my favorites from a shoot that my friend and client Ed and I did earlier this week. Ed is a retired accounting professor and an up-and-coming actor and singer. We created hundreds of actor headshots, but once those were in the can, we worked on some additional dramatic, less traditional shots.

Latest Cover Story - Commercial Integrator Magazine


Adtech CEO David Gormley

I am really happy to be able to share with you my latest cover shoot, for Commercial Integrator magazine, featuring Adtech Systems' CEO David Gormley, all shot on location at their Sudbury, Mass., offices.

 

 

If you have any questions or comments about this, or anything else, I encourage you to leave a comment! And if you want to discuss a project, email me here: http://www.adrienbisson.com/contact/

An Artist and Her Creative Space


Susan Iserbyt

It seems like just a week or so ago, but in January I met artist Sus Iserbyt. She asked me to do some portraits of her in her studio. Web site environmental portraits. Her studio is bright and airy. Her art is beautiful, but arguably, sometimes dark. I prefer to do these kinds of shoots without assistance and without a schedule. This lets both of us create the look and mood of the session, which is different from every other session, just as is every subject.

If you are interested in her work, click here to visit Sus Iserbyt on the web.
(As of this writing, the photos on her site are not from our photo shoot.)

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If you like my work, please do "Like" my Facebook page, link to my web site and follow me on Twitter. And if you would like to set up a shoot, you can contact me here: http://www.adrienbisson.com/contact/

Check out more of my recent work too:

http://www.adrienbisson.com/blog/2012/3/5/interesting-people-in-the-house.html
http://www.adrienbisson.com/blog/2012/1/29/photographers-in-the-hotseat-creating-a-headshot.html
http://www.adrienbisson.com/blog/2011/12/1/just-some-photos-that-i-like.html
http://www.adrienbisson.com/blog/2011/11/21/a-western-avenue-studios-neighbor.html

The People Inside the Non-Profit World

Well one of them anyway...

Some pics from a recent shoot at a local non-profit. This young woman is someone who the camera just cannot get enough of. You know it's happening on a shoot after just a few frames. You set up the scene, start making pictures, and the magic just takes over. Someday, I hope we can shoot again!