2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

download 2013 01 23   The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

of 35

Transcript of 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    1/35

    The Last Roll of Kodachrome

    Frame by Frame!

    A celebrated photographer makes a passage to

    Indiaand marks the end of an era.

    ByDavid Friend

    Photographs bySteve McCurry

    Two years ago, photographer Steve McCurry heard the whispers.Due to the digital-photography revolution, Kodak was considering

    discontinuing one of the most legendary film stocks of all time:

    Kodachrome, a film which was to color slides what the saxophone

    was to jazz. McCurry spoke with Kodaks worldwide-marketing

    wizard Audrey Jonckheer, hoping to persuade Kodak to bequeath

    him the very last roll that came off the assembly line in Rochester,

    New York. They readily agreed. And recently, McCurrymost

    famous for his National Geographic cover of an Afghan girl in arefugee camp, shot on Kodachromeloaded his Nikon F6 with the

    36-exposure spool and headed east, intending to concentrate on

    visual artists like himself, relying on his typical mix of portraiture,

    photojournalism, and street photography.

    Herewith, presented for the first time in their entirety, are the

    frames from that historic final roll, which accompanied McCurry

    from the manufacturing plant in Rochester to his home in

    Manhattan (where he is a member of the prestigious photo agencyMagnum), to Bombay, Rajasthan, Bombay, Istanbul, London, and

    back to New York. (The camera was X-rayed twice at airports along

    the way.) McCurrys final stop, on July 12, 2010: Dwaynes Photo, in

    Parsons, Kansasthe only lab on Earth that still developed

    Kodachromewhich halted all such processing in late December.

    What did he choose to shoot on the last frame of that last roll?

    A statue in a Parsons graveyard (in the section reserved for Civil

    War veterans), bearing flowers of the same yellow-and-red hue asthe Kodak package. (See Frame 36.) I saw a statue of this soldier,

    http://www.vanityfair.com/contributors/david-friendhttp://www.vanityfair.com/contributors/steve-mccurryhttp://www.vanityfair.com/contributors/steve-mccurryhttp://www.vanityfair.com/contributors/david-friend
  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    2/35

    looking off in the distance, says McCurry, age 60, and hes kind of

    looking off into the future or the past. I figure, This is perfect. A

    cemetery. Kodachromethis is the end of this sort of film

    [suggesting] the transience of life. This is something thats

    disappearing forever.And what, pray tell, will McCurry miss most about his old

    trusty chrome? (He happens to have shot, at last count, 800,000

    Kodachrome frames over the past four decades.) Ive been shooting

    digital for years, he insists, but I dont think you can make a better

    photograph under certain conditions than you can with

    Kodachrome. If you have good light and youre at a fairly high

    shutter speed, its going to be a brilliant color photograph. It had a

    great color palette. It wasnt too garish. Some films are like youreon a drug or something. Velvia made everything so saturated and

    wildly over-the-top, too electric. Kodachrome had more poetry in it,

    a softness, an elegance. With digital photography, you gain many

    benefits [but] you have to put in post-production. [With

    Kodachrome,] you take it out of the box and the pictures are already

    brilliant.

    Never more, alas. Unless, of course, some chemist some day

    comes up with a way to replicate the complex, expensivedeveloping process. Until then, McCurry is biding his time. I have

    a few rolls of Kodachrome in the fridge, he claims. Im just going

    to leave it there. My fridge would be kind of empty without them. If

    they ever revive Kodachrome like they did Polaroid, Ill be poised

    and ready to go!

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    3/35

    Frame 1. Actor Robert De Niro in his screening room in Tribeca, in New York City, May 2010.

    (Frame 2, not shown, is a near duplicate.)

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    4/35

    FRAME 3 De Niro in his screening room, May 2010. (Frame 4, not shown, is a near duplicate.)

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    5/35

    FRAME 5 De Niro in his office in Tribeca, May 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    6/35

    FRAME 7 Indian film actor, director, and producer Aamir Khan in India, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    7/35

    FRAME 8 A boy in a tea shop in Dharavi, the largest slum in Asia, near Mumbai, India, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    8/35

    FRAME 10 A sculpture studio in Mumbai that produces statues of notable Indian personages and Hindu gods, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    9/35

    FRAME 11 Indian writer and actress Shenaz Treasurywala, in India, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    10/35

    FRAME 12 Indian film actress and director Nandita Das, in India, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    11/35

    FRAME 13 Shekhar Kapur, director of Elizabeth, in India, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    12/35

    FRAME 14 Amitabh Bachchan, one of the countrys most prominent actors, in India, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    13/35

    FRAME 15 A Rabari tribal elder, photographed in India, June 2010

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    14/35

    FRAME 16 A Rabari tribal elder, photographed in India, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    15/35

    FRAME 17 A Rabari tribal elder, who is also an itinerant magician, photographed in India, June 2010

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    16/35

    FRAME 18 A Rabari tribal elder and itinerant magician, photographed in India, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    17/35

    FRAME 20 A Rabari woman, photographed in India, June 2010

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    18/35

    FRAME 21 A Rabari woman, photographed in India, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    19/35

    FRAME 22 A Rabari girl, photographed in India, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    20/35

    FRAME 23 An elderly Rabari woman, photographed in India, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    21/35

    FRAME 24 A Rabari boy, photographed in India, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    22/35

    FRAME 25 Turkish photographer Ara Guler (The Eye of Istanbul), in Istanbul, Turkey, June 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    23/35

    FRAME 26 Street art at Seventh Avenue and Bleecker Street, in New York City, July 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    24/35

    FRAME 27 Grand Central Terminal, in New York City, July 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    25/35

    FRAME 28 A woman reading on a Saturday afternoon in Washington Square Park, in New York City, July 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    26/35

    FRAME 29 A street performer in Washington Square Park, July 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    27/35

    FRAME 30 Magnum photographer Elliott Erwitt in his Central Park West studio, in New York City, July 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    28/35

    FRAME 31 A young couple in Union Square, in New York City, July 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    29/35

    FRAME 32 A self-portrait of Steve McCurry, taken in Manhattan, July 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    30/35

    FRAME 33 A man on a bench in front of a statue of Mahatma Gandhi in Union

    Square, July 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    31/35

    FRAME 34 McCurry at four a.m. in his hotel room watching a Stephen Colbert interview on television, in Parsons, Kansas,

    July 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    32/35

    FRAME 35 A local man sleeps outside a community center in Parsons, July 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    33/35

    FRAME 36 A statue in a cemetery in Parsons, home to the last photographic lab in the

    world that developed Kodachrome film, July 2010.

  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    34/35

    Watch as National Geographic

    Photographer Steve McCurry Shoots

    the Very Last Roll of KodachromeinPhotography| January 22nd, 2013 Leave a Comment

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=DUL

    6MBVKVLI#t=86s

    Ask a photographer from the century that just passed to name his or

    her favorite film, and the answer, very often, will be Kodachrome.

    The crisp emulsion, beautifully saturated colors and archival

    stability of Kodachrome made it a sentimental favorite among

    photographers long after other, more practical color films had all

    but pushed it out of the marketplace. The problem was, the very

    qualities that made the film special stemmed from a highly

    cumbersome technical process. Kodachrome was a non-

    substantive film, meaning the dye couplers were not built into the

    emulsion, as they are in other color films, but had to be addedduring development. The process was complex, and few labs could

    afford to offer it. Even before the digital revolution, Kodachrome

    was an endangered species.

    So while it came as an emotional shock to many

    photographers, it was no real surprise when the Eastman Kodak

    Company announced in 2009 that it was halting production of

    Kodachrome. One of the photographers who had long-since movedon to digital imaging but who was saddened by the demise of

    Kodachrome was Steve McCurry, an award-winning

    photojournalist for National Geographic who is best known for his

    haunting 1984 image (shot on Kodachrome) of a 12-year-old Afghan

    refugee girl with piercing green eyes. When McCurry heard the

    news, he arranged to obtain the very last roll of Kodachrome to

    come off the assembly line at the Kodak plant in Rochester, New

    York. The challenge, then, was this: What do you do with the last 36exposures of a legendary film?

    http://www.openculture.com/2013/01/watch_as_national_geographic_photographer_steve_mccurry_shoots_the_very_last_roll_of_kodachrome.htmlhttp://www.openculture.com/2013/01/watch_as_national_geographic_photographer_steve_mccurry_shoots_the_very_last_roll_of_kodachrome.htmlhttp://www.openculture.com/2013/01/watch_as_national_geographic_photographer_steve_mccurry_shoots_the_very_last_roll_of_kodachrome.htmlhttp://www.openculture.com/category/photography-2http://www.openculture.com/category/photography-2http://www.openculture.com/category/photography-2http://www.openculture.com/2013/01/watch_as_national_geographic_photographer_steve_mccurry_shoots_the_very_last_roll_of_kodachrome.html#respondhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=DUL6MBVKVLI#t=86shttp://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=DUL6MBVKVLI#t=86shttp://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1906503,00.htmlhttp://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-path=15359&pq-locale=en_UShttp://stevemccurry.com/http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/100best/multi1_interview.htmlhttp://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/100best/multi1_interview.htmlhttp://stevemccurry.com/http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-path=15359&pq-locale=en_UShttp://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1906503,00.htmlhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=DUL6MBVKVLI#t=86shttp://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=DUL6MBVKVLI#t=86shttp://www.openculture.com/2013/01/watch_as_national_geographic_photographer_steve_mccurry_shoots_the_very_last_roll_of_kodachrome.html#respondhttp://www.openculture.com/category/photography-2http://www.openculture.com/2013/01/watch_as_national_geographic_photographer_steve_mccurry_shoots_the_very_last_roll_of_kodachrome.htmlhttp://www.openculture.com/2013/01/watch_as_national_geographic_photographer_steve_mccurry_shoots_the_very_last_roll_of_kodachrome.htmlhttp://www.openculture.com/2013/01/watch_as_national_geographic_photographer_steve_mccurry_shoots_the_very_last_roll_of_kodachrome.html
  • 7/28/2019 2013 01 23 The Last Roll of Kodachrome.pdf

    35/35

    The half-hour documentary above from National Geographic tells the

    story of that roll and how McCurry used it. The filmmakers

    followed the photographer on an odyssey that began at the factory

    in Rochester and ended at a laboratory (the last Kodachrome lab

    open) in a small town in Kansas. Over the course of about six weeks,from late May to early July, 2010, McCurry traveled halfway around

    the world to make those final 36 exposures. The resulting

    photographs iclude street scenes in New York and Kansas, portraits

    of a movie star (Robert De Niro) in New York, intellectuals and

    ethnic tribesmen in India, colleagues in Turkey and New York, and

    one of himself. Its a remarkable take. Although a few of the shots

    appear spontaneous, most are the result of careful planning.

    McCurry donated all 36 slides to the George Eastman HouseInternational Museum of Photography and Film, but you can see

    almost all of the photos online at the Vanity Fair Web site. As

    McCurry tells the magazine:

    Ive been shooting digital for years, but I dont think you

    can make a better photograph under certain conditions than

    you can with Kodachrome. If you have good light and youre at

    a fairly high shutter speed, its going to be a brilliant colorphotograph. It had a great color palette. It wasnt too garish.

    Some films are like youre on a drug or something. Velvia

    made everything so saturated and wildly over-the-top, too

    electric. Kodachrome had more poetry in it, a softness, an

    elegance. With digital photography, you gain many benefits

    [but] you have to put in post-production. [With Kodachrome]

    you take it out of the box and the pictures are already brilliant.

    http://www.eastmanhouse.org/http://www.eastmanhouse.org/http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2011/02/last-kodachrome-slide-show-201102#slide=1http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2011/02/last-kodachrome-slide-show-201102#slide=1http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2011/02/last-kodachrome-slide-show-201102#slide=1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velviahttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velviahttp://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2011/02/last-kodachrome-slide-show-201102#slide=1http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2011/02/last-kodachrome-slide-show-201102#slide=1http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2011/02/last-kodachrome-slide-show-201102#slide=1http://www.eastmanhouse.org/http://www.eastmanhouse.org/