• Home
  • Work
    • Bourke's Regulars
    • The Future's Bright
    • Portraits of Employees Deceased, Left, Retired
    • From Around These Parts
    • Pictures of People in Public Places
  • Short Stories
    • Bye Bye Baker Building
    • Demolition
    • New Faces
    • On the Steps
    • Out of Season
    • Socially Distant
    • The Touring Shroud
    • Somewhere In-between
  • Publications
    • Framelines
    • Normal Service Will Be Resumed
    • No Smoking After 4pm
    • Portmanteau
  • Black & White
    • Darkroom Workbook
    • Black & White Gallery
  • Commercial
    • Family
    • Portraits
    • Product
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Menu

Matt Peers

  • Home
  • Work
    • Bourke's Regulars
    • The Future's Bright
    • Portraits of Employees Deceased, Left, Retired
    • From Around These Parts
    • Pictures of People in Public Places
  • Short Stories
    • Bye Bye Baker Building
    • Demolition
    • New Faces
    • On the Steps
    • Out of Season
    • Socially Distant
    • The Touring Shroud
    • Somewhere In-between
  • Publications
    • Framelines
    • Normal Service Will Be Resumed
    • No Smoking After 4pm
    • Portmanteau
  • Black & White
    • Darkroom Workbook
    • Black & White Gallery
  • Commercial
    • Family
    • Portraits
    • Product
  • Blog
  • Contact

Do you mind, I am smoking a fag!

March 25, 2014 in Photography skills, Portraits

A couple of years a go I attended a lecture by the seminal photographer Steve McCurry. He's the one that took the famous picture of the Afghan girl with the 'eyes'. To be honest the lecture was pretty dull - a sort of death by power point and greatest hits mixed together - but he did impart  some advice that stuck with me; always have a recurrent theme. His was to photograph people sleeping in public ( whatever floats your boat I suppose...) and mine has ,by accident rather than design, been of people smoking. Rather than enter moral or medical arguments about the habit ( for the record I only smoke when I’m rubbed hard enough...), for me it offers a unique window in to the person and their life.

The broad spectrum of people is fascinating; from the cinematic cool looking youngsters to the  older generations displaying its long term effects. The lack of public indoor smoking options means it's a great theme for street photography.

Huddled in shop doorways and shelters, the scenes can have a sense of street theatre to them; some dispossessed, rejected by the non smoking world feel to them, others ganged together, laughing and enjoying their nicotine fuelled time together. 

Either way, I’m sticking to Steve McCurry’s advice and carrying on my theme, but avoiding people sleeping in public...for now.

Till next time...

Matt Peers


 

 

Tags: smoking, photography projects, street portraits
Prev / Next

Latest Posts

Blog
Normal Service Will Be Resumed - The Ilford Blog
Normal Service Will Be Resumed - The Ilford Blog
about 8 months ago
Ready for launch
Ready for launch
about 8 months ago
Framelines Feature
Framelines Feature
about 9 months ago
Behind the Image #29
about 5 years ago
The shifting verticals and horizontals of Milton Keynes
The shifting verticals and horizontals of Milton Keynes
about 5 years ago

I was obviously a good boy in 2019, as at Christmas, Santa Claus flew via Japan and got me a 75mm f4.5 shift lens for my Pentax 67II. Where better to test the precise verticals than the clean lines of Milton Keynes…

Not being Vivian Maier - a sort of review of the Rolleiflex 2.8f
Not being Vivian Maier - a sort of review of the Rolleiflex 2.8f
about 5 years ago

It has nearly been 12 months since I got my hands on a Rolleiflex 2.8f, and whilst I'm not usually a reviewer of equipment, I'd like to share my experience of using this iconic camera and the inspiration behind me finally owning one.

Behind the image #28
about 6 years ago
Kent Light
Kent Light
about 6 years ago
Three Billboards
Three Billboards
about 6 years ago

Three Billboards in Digbeth

A Notion of Heritage
A Notion of Heritage
about 6 years ago

What you doing?"

"What you doing that for?"

"Why here?"

I get these questions regularly when I'm out shooting, but never more so than my recent couple of visits to Milton Keynes.