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I'm a native Chicagoan
and a born photographer, and have never wanted to be anything else.
Funny thing is I've been a pro since the age of 13 when I was commissioned
by various friends' parents to shoot portraits of their families.
I had my first legitimate show at 17 and sold my first photographs
to an ad agency at 18: race car photos for use in Pure Oil national
ads shot through Leo Burnett. I started Bart Harris Photography,
Inc. at 23 and shot retail fashion for Both Marshall Field & Co.
and Carson Pirie Scott & Co. as well as several small ad agencies.
My early ad agency photography revolved around humor and an opportunity
to shoot Virginia Slims old-time photos early in my career really
helped propel me into the limelight.
I always had a great desire to see images as
I created them. In the early 70's, as its quality improved, I began
using 4x5 color Polaroid as final film, something no one else had
yet done. That led directly to beta testing and lecturing for Polaroid
Corporation's new 8x10 print material. This only served to further
whet my appetite for what was to follow years later as the use of
computers and digital photography began to develop.
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To put my
early interest in Polaroid use in context, when I began shooting
professionally, there was no professional Polaroid (instant) material
available for photographers to "proof read" their photos. At that
time the only way to preview photographs was to either shoot a test
hours beforehand or "hot soup" black and white film and make quick
prints from still wet negatives, while models took a paid coffee
break.
Additionally, in those times a photographer
had to understand both physics and chemistry. One had to understand
bellows factor, gamma ratios, color filtration, how to read and
interpret exposure meters and more. For most photographers, these
skills were developed over decades, certainly a much longer period
of time than today's auto-exposure/auto-focus, zoom-lensed cameras
require.
I stumbled upon digital photography in late
1994 when I tested a Kodak DCS460 digital camera that many "experts"
incorrectly said was inferior to 35mm film. I discovered it was
quite the opposite… but more about that in Technology.
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