Instacandid

Blog for viewing and sharing candid photos

Category: Young Male

Broadway Buddhists (or the Tao of Tattoo)

Adam Isler's avatar

This is one of my favorite images from The Burghers of Broadway series. It was shot in September of 2006. There was some sort of Buddhist event at the Symphony Space, across the street. Crossing the median I encountered this pair and asked if I could take a picture. The monk on the left seemed largely unaware of, or uninterested in, me or my question. But the tattooed man on the right explained what I was asking and, receiving what I thought was a fairly non-committal response, posed. It was clear he felt greatly honored to have his picture taken in the monk’s company and I suspect he must be a revered monk of some renown.

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Wednesday February 20th 2013

Canons On The Hill

we don’t care

….

The 1970’s

Rich Green's avatarRich Green Photography

Candid Street Portrait
We all have our past. My  youth was spent in the 1960’s and 70’s. Most of my friends were musicians. I wasn’t one. I was the filmmaker-photographer with an emphasis on “filmmaker”. In practical terms what that means today, is I have photographs of my friends, but not enough of them. I pulled out these images recently, reconnected with the old gang on facebook and they have greatly enjoyed seeing themselves. What I wish is that I had taken more pictures. A lot more.
The young man above was Keith. He was a talented guitar player but a horrendous cameraman. In 1970 I was working on my film “The Blitz”. It’s about a young man (me) who found a Puerto Rican genie (another close friend) who grants him a wish – to become Hitler. It was a silent comedy movie with music. Filming of the movie was “unorganized” as you…

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Grand Street, NYC

bubbles…

So British, a man sitting in St John Wood…

Unit 44 – The Bugle Infantry

jcorrphotography's avatarJCorr Photojournalism

Unit 44 - The Bugle Infantry

On January 21, 2013, Ralph Phillips, dressed in Union Soldier uniform from the Civil War, stands in attention while holding the American Flag at the “MLK March” in Chattanooga, TN. He paraded with a small group called, “Unit 44 -The Bugle Infantry,” who marched with drums and rifles in hand. Hundreds of people participated in this event, beginning at the Olivet Baptist Church and ended at the Tivoli Theatre where a ceremony was held honoring Martin Luther King Jr.

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