Friday, September 24, 2010

IF- old-fashioned

Nowadays people own many pairs of shoes and we can easily replace our old shoes with new ones.

But…what happen if it’s the shoes that you love or those shoes that cost you a lot of money? Will you still throw it away? Well, you don’t' have to, you just have to do it the old fashioned way. You can always go to a shoe repair shop. You don't have to feel like you waste a lot of money when you have to throw away a very expensive broken shoe. You can pay a reasonable price to a shoe repairer and he can fix your shoe like it is new again.

If their craftsmanship and skill, you will be amazed that it cost you that little money. This person is a shoe repairer at my neighborhood in Brooklyn. He sets up his shop outside on the sidewalk. He was really immerse into his work and craftsmanship. Many passengers also stopped and took a look.

IF- old-fashioned

The topic for this semester's painting is “emotion.” I didn’t want someone to pose the same-old facial expressions to express happiness, sadness, anger, etc. I want it to be candid and genuine. I was lucky to capture this man in his (probably) 60s or 70s helping a woman fix her shoes. I have taken another shoe repairer before him but I find him more interesting, probably because he is much older. I admire his concentration, craftsmanship, skill, and his strength. He was really immersed work that he didn’t look up once or notice that I was taking pictures of him. His craftsmanship also attract many passengers to stop and take a look. I like this sketch because it was the moment that he was about to hammer the nail into her shoe. He shows his skill, strength, concentration, craftsmanship, and professionalism. My “emotion” painting is about a man who is in the moment of doing what he does best, simply a shoe repairer fixing a shoe. Just like an artist is at the moment making art. That real and true feeling.