For the 5th anniversary of Marie Claire in India, we shot the beautiful, smart and funny Sonam Kapoor. My first cover shoot for Marie Claire, I absolutely loved working with this team. Its amazing what you can do with one big beautiful light, a run down studio in bombay and about 3 set pieces
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Monday, June 20, 2011
Saturday, June 18, 2011
GQ India Cover shoot June 2011
Here's some new work for GQ India with cricketer Virat Kohli
Photography by Martin Prihoda
Fashion Editor: Vijendra Bhardwaj
Hair and Makeup (Virat): Sapna Bhavnani/Mad o Wot
H/m (Models): Sara Capela, Sunita Brace, Menaka Chhinal/FAT MU
Models: Rebekah Charlton, Courtney Simpson, Jana Perez/Anima
Junior Fashion Editor: Antara Motiwala
Fashion Assistant: Anuj Lall
Production: Gizelle Cordo
PA: Priyanka Bagai
Retouching: Martin Prihoda/Manpreet Ahuja
Location: Presidential suite, The Oberoi. Mumbai
Saturday, June 11, 2011
chillin' with the Tibetans
Dharamsala is a dope place, not just cause hash is as readily available as Dal and rice but because its so damn chill. Originally an english hill station set up against the foothills of the Himalayas its now home to the Dalai Lama an the Tibetan government in exile.
I'm not doing much work except for coordinating the post work for my latest Harper's Bazaar shot between my retoucher in Israel and the editor in Delhi. Its been pretty much Yoga and meditation classes and long hikes through the foothills with my wife, son and our friends from Canada.
I've been going through some past work putting together images for an exhibition i want to do and found this outtake from a fashion shoot in Rajasthan a few months back.
We'll be back in Bombay around the 17th of June and then its a bunch of ad shoots back to back till we head back to Canada for a few weeks.
So i guess this is the calm before the storm.
I'm not doing much work except for coordinating the post work for my latest Harper's Bazaar shot between my retoucher in Israel and the editor in Delhi. Its been pretty much Yoga and meditation classes and long hikes through the foothills with my wife, son and our friends from Canada.
I've been going through some past work putting together images for an exhibition i want to do and found this outtake from a fashion shoot in Rajasthan a few months back.
We'll be back in Bombay around the 17th of June and then its a bunch of ad shoots back to back till we head back to Canada for a few weeks.
So i guess this is the calm before the storm.
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| Taken outside of Jaipur, Rajasthan at sunset |
Thursday, June 2, 2011
The Mind and the Movie Theater analogy.
I'm taking a bit of time off, its too damn hot in Bombay to work, anyways.
I grew up with immigrants for parents whose work ethic made drone worker bees look like Jeff Spicoli. Its difficult for me to engage in relaxing sometimes because I tend to feel like I need to be constantly doing/creating/building something. That's been a great thing when it comes to my career, but not a great thing for the deeper pursuit of spiritual expansion.
Here's a related analogy I love. Its called the movie theatre analogy:
Let's say you're sitting inside a move theatre, totally engrossed, watching Tom Cruise jump off the 200 hundred storey Burj Khalifa. What you're not realizing is that for half the time you're in the theatre you're sitting in complete darkness.
A strip of Film moves through a projector at 24 frames per second. As each frame snaps into place, the shutter opens and a bright light shines through the celluloid and an image is projected onto the silver screen.
What happens next is the shutter closes, blocking all light from touching the film. a small metal claw then reaches out into the sprocket hole, grabs the film and pulls the next frame down into the shutter gate. The shutter opens and the next frame is illuminated.
The image on the next frame to appear is only slightly different that the image before. Perhaps a slight movement of the hand or leg of the actor, or a car, or an explosion. Twenty four of these frame move through the gate in one second.
So if there is complete darkness between frames, why does a movie appear to be so fluid and seamless before our eyes?
The answer is Persistence of Vision. Basically, the the light of the image is retained in our retinas and in our minds long enough for that gate to close and the next frame to be pulled down. Its the persistence of the light that gives the impression, the illusion, that what we are watching is seamless.
But really its a big fat ass lie. We are watching a bunch of still images with a lot of darkness in between. Our eyes have deceived us horribly. Really really horribly if you're not a Tom Cruise fan.
Here's the kicker. Your mind is like that movie theatre.
Our everyday 'reality' is the movie. The darkness between the 'frames' is the infinite creative potential of our deepest being. Its the genius within us all; the intuitive, soulful and mysterious heart of life itself.
Most of us don't know about this infinite potential because we're so engrossed in the 'movie:' the bills, the work, the relationships, the friends, the gossip, the politics, the ego..its all a big ass lie, just like the film you watch.
And just as the movie theatre is pitch black half the movie, that infinite creative potential is always with us; waiting patiently for the 'movie' to be turned off, or at least slowed down.
Once we explore the gaps between the film frames of our lives, we begin to uncover the magic and power of pure potential that the Buddha and Christ were tapped into and that has been experienced by many of humanity's great souls.
Probably the most effective way to start slowing the movie down is through meditation; the practice of sitting quietly and observing the frenetic nature of the mind. Its through this observation that we witness the 'Gap' and experience our true nature.
Its a beautiful thing because our movies get tiring; the insane thing being, its usually the same movie day in and day out. The same reactive mind is reacting to similar stimulus creating deeper and deeper unconscious patterning. Who the hell would want to watch the same movie over and over and over again? Yet thats what so many of us do...myself included.
So thats what i'm going to do. I'm going away to slow the movie down. I'm going to explore that creative space between the frames and who knows...maybe i'll meet Tom Cruise.
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| Delhi. still working, but poolside at least. |
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