Toni Hafkenscheid is a well-known Toronto photographer, one of those people whose images I've seen a lot but of whom I often wondered "how do they interpret or think about their own work?"
With shows currently on in Vancouver and Toronto, Hafkenscheid indulged my questions about his practice, which uses a lot of tilt-shift technique. The results are in today's National Post Q&A. An excerpt:
Q Does it bother you that a lot of people these days do tilt-shift on a computer, rather than in a camera?
A Not really. Sure, tilt-shift's pretty easy to do in Photoshop. But to me, it's all about driving the whole day and getting excited about sunlight hitting a scene at a certain angle. It's all about following the light. The tilt-shift is just my comfort level now. Granted, two months ago I threw out my home darkroom. You just can't get the chemicals for it anymore. But I still shoot analog, then scan to digital.
Q A lot of artists hire you to photograph their artwork. Do you ever think you'd like to work in another art form?
A No. I really just want to be a photographer. Realizing I was good at photography when I was 24 was, like, my saviour. I enjoy looking at other kinds of art, but the only time I feel I can say anything about art is when it's photography. One of the other jobs I sometimes get is shooting high-end interiors. Like a fancy model suite at Bay and Cumberland-- there's all this gorgeous furniture and a beautiful view. It's still kind of in a dream world, like my other work.
Image of Toni Hafkenscheid's Hell's Gate from Gallery Jones
Showing posts with label toni hafkenscheid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label toni hafkenscheid. Show all posts
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Tiny happy people: Q&A with Toni Hafkenscheid
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gallery jones,
toni hafkenscheid
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