portrait | brent bushnell

We got the opportunity to meet Brent and it was one that really touch our hearts. He is probably one of the rare people we’ve meet whose eyes seemed to have seen all. It isn’t easy to be an artist in San Francisco, and survival is a little hard and even harder now than ever.

The Examiner mentions that “with apartments renting at $2000 a month and condos selling for five million and up, it’s become a city for the 1%. But some artists have managed to survive without compromising their vision of making art that transcends boundaries and speaks to both environmental concerns and mystical beliefs. Just ask Brent Bushnell who has managed to survive in San Francisco for decades, with one stint “in exile” in Sacramento… Brent came to San Francisco in 60s and got his MFA at SFSU, studying with noted Bay Area sculptor Stephen de Staebler, (among others)”

His studio was a small one and there was so much organized clutter all around but the kind of clutter where everything seemed to be used often and never lost it’s place on the shelf or crevice. Just like all the tool he had used to create his art, he and his passion for  will forever have a place in this city.

The other wonderful thing is that the homeless, encamped around the sculpture, tended the the works to keep them from being destroyed. Brent and Sofia brought some art even into the grim and difficult lives of San Francesco’s lowest of the low, proving that art can communicate across all boundaries.

“Brent shares concerns about the environment, our wanton misuse of natural resources and destruction of the wilderness. He is on a journey compelled by the love of art and, for both, it is the journey that is the reward.” You can find some of Brent’s sculptures around the city. “And the wonderful thing is that the homeless, encamped around the sculptures, tended the works to keep them from being destroyed, proving that art can communicate across all boundaries, even into the grim and difficult lives of those in San Francisco.”

the head shot

When it comes to head shots, sometimes all you need to do is take a deep breath and smile. It’s natural to tense up in front of the camera sometimes, but all you really need to do is let loose your personality and the rest is easy 🙂 For this session, Brian did great following through with direction and some squinching (a term that portraitist Peter Hurley coined, although it’s an actual word in the dictionary, for the action of squinting your eyes in such a way as to portray confidence and self-assurance as opposed to the fear and uncertainty that you project when you stare wide-eyed at the camera) so we got through three wardrobe changes in half and hour.

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portraits | cookies + lollipops

It’s Easter and we got to spend some time with these two boys today. We’re always so excited to see these boys each year and this time Oz is turning four years old and Zander is now two, the same age that Oz was when we first met the family. Time certainly flies but sweets never cease to get the boys’ attention during our portrait sessions with them. Today, they got their essential sugar high with a some cookies and a lollipop each and the excitement in their faces were just too cute!

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portrait | first dates

Aurelie reached out to us wanting to gift a portrait session for her boyfriend, who’d been wanting nice portraits of themselves ever since they met. We thought it was very endearing when they said they wanted to document places that were significant to the beginnings of their relationship and relive some of their first date moments 🙂

aj1aj3aj4aj5These two are absolutely smitten with each other and we’re so happy we were able to help them relive their happy beginnings ❤