RIP: Mary Ellen Mark

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sdharris
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Sad news. I love her work for decades. She did some great work documenting Calcutta.
 
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BrianShaw

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OMG.. very sad news. She was talented at both photography and social commentary. She will be missed but always remembered.
 
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DWThomas

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Sad news indeed. In 2012 the Philadelphia Museum of Art had a nice exhibit of her work featuring high school kids attending proms. Quite a few were taken using a 20 x 24 inch Polaroid; she was apparently one of very few who had such a monster.

(Maybe also sobering news because she was about 15 months older than Yers Trooly!)
 

TheFlyingCamera

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Sad news indeed. In 2012 the Philadelphia Museum of Art had a nice exhibit of her work featuring high school kids attending proms. Quite a few were taken using a 20 x 24 inch Polaroid; she was apparently one of very few who had such a monster.

(Maybe also sobering news because she was about 15 months older than Yers Trooly!)

Actually I don't think any individual owns the 20x24 Polaroid cameras. They're such big beasts and so expensive to feed, for years they were owned and operated by Polaroid themselves in dedicated studios. Since the demise of Polaroid, there have actually been a few more of the cameras made, but you still rent them by the hour. I'd have to ask Tracy Storer (he built a couple of them in the last 2-3 years) if they went to private individuals or to rental studios.
 

DWThomas

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Actually I don't think any individual owns the 20x24 Polaroid cameras. They're such big beasts and so expensive to feed, for years they were owned and operated by Polaroid themselves in dedicated studios. Since the demise of Polaroid, there have actually been a few more of the cameras made, but you still rent them by the hour. I'd have to ask Tracy Storer (he built a couple of them in the last 2-3 years) if they went to private individuals or to rental studios.

Interesting -- my original comment was extrapolated from what I thought I knew, sorry! Anyway, she was entangled with them in some fashion. The exhibit I saw really captured some of the excitement of kids getting dressed to the nines and going out for a big night.
 

TheFlyingCamera

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Interesting -- my original comment was extrapolated from what I thought I knew, sorry! Anyway, she was entangled with them in some fashion. The exhibit I saw really captured some of the excitement of kids getting dressed to the nines and going out for a big night.

She probably had a sponsor for the project - even if she owns the camera (which would be somewhere in the neighborhood of $20-$30K), the prints run around $50 an exposure. Not to mention the amount of light you need! Even full-length portraits are going to require some bellows extension exposure compensation, probably 1 stop, and to get enough depth-of-field to keep your subjects sharp, you're already down around f/32. So you're talking about needing to hit f/45 on the exposure meter with lights at least 6-10 feet from the subject, and the ISO is around 100 IIRC. That's some serious power.
 
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Rick A

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Her price for 20x24 portrait sittings started at $20,000.
 

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There are 20x24 cameras in private hands. All of them are now, since polaroid is defunct. Elsa Dorfman in Boston (?) I think has one, also the 20x24 studio that is a partner with the new55 crowd. Some places still do rentals, I think it's on the order of $400-600/shot. A dedicated tech to run the camera comes at that price, they handle all the mechanics of it, from what I have read.
 
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Rick A

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I think 'resting" infers taking the big dirt nap.
 
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The death of Mary Ellen Mark means a big lose to photography, especially to analog photography, she used analog cameras to the end of her work and live. She hated the use of photoshop in any form of photojournalism or documentary.

I have the honor of had been her pupil and friend. I'm certain that it will be hard to find someone so committed to photography, now and in the future.

Truly, rest in peace Mary Ellen Mark.

Attached I post the last portrait I made of her, in 2011
mem1113408b.jpg
 
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