Thailand Footprint: The People, Things, Literature, and Music of Thailand and the Region

Posts tagged ‘Eric Nelson photographer’

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Bangkok Beat passes the digit test with one tough critic
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I am pleased to announce the launch of the paperback edition of Bangkok Beat via Create Space store and Amazon.com. The book is now available at Amazon USA, Amazon UK, Amazon Europe . The eBook will launch on August 8th and is now available for pre-order in Australia and world-wide. Call me old fashioned, paper first.
In addition an order has been made from Create Space which will enable Bangkok Beat to be sold directly from this web site and also directly at Checkinn99 located forever between Sukhumvit Soi 5 and Soi 7 in Bangkok, Thailand. Don’t look for the sign. It’s gone.
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BANGKOK BEAT ebook cover 8june2015 border2500 (1)Bangkok Beat front cover design by Colin Cotterill
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Bangkok Beat – Paperback – June 8, 2015

Authored by Mr Kevin Cummings 

Authored with John Gartland, Thomas Hunt Locke
Photographs by Eric Nelson, Alasdair McLeod, Jonathan van Smit
Introduction by James A. Newman
Cover artwork by Colin Cotterill

Bangkok Beat is a compilation of short stories, interviews, literature reviews and author profiles, plus the previously unpublished history and pictures of the iconic Bangkok cabaret nightclub, Checkinn99 located on Sukhumvit Road. In reading Bangkok Beat you will get up close with many well-known and not so well-known expats and characters staying in Thailand and Southeast Asia. Between the covers of Bangkok Beat you will get to know: champion male and female Muay Thai boxers, a surfing historian, a legendary mamasan, Chris Coles – noted expressionist artist of the Bangkok night, and a gold chain snatching ladyboy. You’ll also encounter the inside of Baccara Bar on Soi Cowboy, an Australian front man for a Khmer band, a smiling waitress named Mook, a spirit house for a Hollywood screenwriter and producer, and the biographer for Jim Morrison, Elvis Presley and Jimi Hendrix. Plus world class musicians including Jason Mraz. In addition you’ll find interviews and profiles of many well known novelists living in and writing about Thailand and Southeast Asia. (Contains 54 black and white photographs.) This book of non-fiction is ably assisted with an introduction by Bangkok pulp fiction author, James A. Newman, a short story by T Hunt Locke titled The Beauty of Issan and a chapter of noir verse written by the poet noir, John Gartland. Many of the 54 black and white photographs found in Bangkok Beat were taken by professional photographers Eric Nelson, Alasdair McLeod and Jonathan van Smit. There is something for everyone to be found on the pages of Bangkok Beat.

Publication Date:
Jun 08 2015
Aug 08 2015 eBook (Amazon)
ISBN/EAN13:
0692396454 / 9780692396452
Related Categories:
Literary Criticism / Short Stories

Product Details

  • Paperback: 292 pages
  • Publisher: Frog in the Mirror Press (June 8, 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-13: 978-0692396452
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 0.7 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds

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* As legally required by law, Gop is a paid celebrity endorser. Your results upon purchasing and reading Bangkok Beat may vary, star wise, high or low.

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A Frog in the Mirror Press publication

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Bangkok Beat is now available at Create Space Stores and all Amazon.com stores in paperback. The eBook may now be pre-ordered at Amazon for a September 8th, 2015 launch. Anyone buying the paperback on Amazon is eligible to download the Kindle version for free. 

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Sometimes it is better to be lucky than good. Last spring, shortly after starting Thailand Footprint I had a lot of good luck. A friend introduced me to professional photographer, Eric Nelson from Chicago. Eric became the second interview I did on this blog. You can see that interview and 12 of his photographs by clicking here.: A DOZEN PHOTOGRAPHS AND INTERVIEW WITH ERIC NELSON.

I liked Eric’s style as a photographer and a person. He is an explorer and Bangkok presents the perfect environment for exploration. My luck continued when after those 12 photographs and interview with Eric ran, a comment came in with an interesting avatar and words:

MelissaAvatar

Great interview with Eric! I am privileged to have been photographed by him on his wanders to the area of my Muay Thai gym. A talented photographer and a lovely guy too.

Five minutes of Google research told me the comment came from Melissa Ray, a Champion Muay Ying with a Ph.D from England. The  holder of four Championship belts until injuries forced her retirement. I now knew I had a female, expat, Muay Thai Champ leaving nice comments about my interview with Eric and Eric Nelson too. When luck presents itself as soul singer, Sista Monica says back in California: “Sometimes you gotta move.”  Arrangements were made to conduct an interview with Melissa Ray and watch her train at Eminent Air Boxing Gym. She had only recently recovered from her injuries enough to allow her to return to training at an elite level.

Melissa Ray, Ph.D and Four Time Muay Thai Champion

Melissa Ray, Ph.D and Four Time Muay Thai Champion (Photo by Eric Nelson)

The interview: A SENSE OF WHERE YOU ARE … A CONVERSATION WITH MUAY THAI CHAMPION MELISSA RAY ran last June. You can read the interview by clicking the picture or text above. That interview received over 240 unique visitors in one day. Pretty good for a two month old blog, at the time. The post has since been viewed close to 1,000 times. Two more times Melissa Ray came out on top.

Fast forward to 10 days ago. I asked Eric Nelson if he would like to go back to Eminent Air Boxing Gym, where he had photographed Melissa to see her again and take some more photographs. Some decisions are easier than others. We went.

Melissa Ray with Victor "Hotchilli" Ntg

Melissa Ray with  MAX Muay Thai Champion Victor “Hotchilli” Ntg (Photo courtesy)

The first thing I noticed about Melissa since I had last seen her was how much leaner, stronger and fitter she looked. As part of her training 10 days ago she ran laps around the neighborhood where Eminent Air Boxing Gym is located, with another Champion, Victor “Hotchilli” Ntg, seen in the above photograph with Melissa. Melissa continues to train and enjoy training. She is now back in England on vacation and visiting family. Whether she fights in the ring again or not, she has a passion for Muay Thai and is a great Ambassador and Champion for the sport.

Eminent Air Gym is a gym of Champions. It is like a scene out of a movie. It is where Apollo Creed would have taken Rocky Balboa to train seriously if Rocky had ever fought in Thailand. Victor was one of two Champions that Melissa introduced me to that day among the many elite Muay Thais training. The other was Chok shown below after winning his Championship belt:

Chok. A Champion and member of Eminent Air Boxing GymChok shown with Channel 7 Championship Belt

Before Chok and Victor got into the ring at Eminent Air Gym I had the opportunity to speak with Victor at length. Victor is an Aussie bloke and a very friendly one at that. The smile on Hotchilli seemed so permanent that I asked him if he smiles during a match, as I had witnessed when I watched a live Muay Thai fight at Channel 7 Arena two months ago. Victor shared that he has two personalities. That he often felt like a completely different person inside the ring during a match. And when the stakes were higher, when the competition was greater, Victor became even more serious inside the ring. We talked about the referees in Thailand and how they tend to judge foreigners vs Thais. Victor will fight again on December 10th, in Khon Kaen Stadium at 10:35 p.m. with big prize money and a MAX Championship belt on the line. You can watch him fight live on Thai TV Channel 7 that day.

Victor Koen Kaen

Victor “Hotchilli” Ntg on far left will fight in the 67 kilo division with baht 1,000,000 in prize money at stake on December 10th, 2013 for the overall MAX Muay Thai Championship

As Chok and Victor got into the ring for their training, Eric Nelson captured the atmosphere at Eminent Air Gym:

Victor tapes up for training at Eminent Air Boxing Gym in Bangkok, Thailand

Victor tapes up for training at Eminent Air Boxing Gym in Bangkok, Thailand (Photo by Eric Nelson)

In Thailand most Thais enjoy Muay Thai as a spectator sport, including monks on their way back to a nearby temple. It is a tough, grueling sport to participate in. Victor Ntg is a gifted athlete. He also trains most everyday and he works hard at his progress. In his past he has participated in Aussie Rules Footy at a high level, been a top sprinter in track and field and a point guard  on the basketball court.

Chok and Victor begin their training as monks from a nearby temple look on at Eminent Air Gym

Chok and Victor begin their training as monks from a nearby temple look on at Eminent Air Gym

It may have been training and not an actual bout but Chok and Victor seemed to be going all out at Eminent Air Gym.

Eminent Air Gym

It was another fun afternoon spent at Eminent Air Boxing gym. It was great to see Melissa again, to meet Chok and to talk with Victor. They were also cool enough to wear the Gop Tshirts I gave them.

Victor Hotchilli Ntg

A smiling MAX Champion Victor Hotchilli Ntg with Gop the frog in the coconut shell

Eminent Air Boxing Gym has an intoxicating, addictive environment. Monks like it. Athletes from all over the world train there. Photographers are drawn there for the array of images to choose from. It is a unique place. As an old basketball gym rat I know how important  gym camaraderie is. It was in full display on a Saturday afternoon in Bangkok.

ChampionEminent Air is where Champions train and are honored on the walls. It’s a serious place and a fun place. It’s a gym I have now been too twice. I know I will be back. Next time I hope to meet and speak with the owner, Mr. Somboon Niruttimetee the founder of Eminent Air Boxing Gym and promoter of ‘Suek Eminent Air’ events at Lumpini Boxing Stadium. Mr. Somboon is a former corporate lawyer and current multiple business owner in Bangkok.

The Boss

Mr. Somboon Niruttimetee founder of Eminent Air Gym. (Known in the Press as, Tanay Toi – Tanay means lawyer. )

Many thanks to Eric Nelson, Melissa Ray, Chok and Victor. Melissa will be reading this in England.  Eric Nelson will continue to explore Bangkok taking exceptional photographs along the way.  And Victor “Hotchilli” Ntg will be fighting for the MAX World Championship on December 10th, 2013 in a four man tournament. I wish Victor good luck on that day. He’ll need two wins to wear the Champion’s belt. Sometimes it is better to be lucky than good. But nobody ever said, you can’t be both.

Victor

Eric Nelson’s contact details can be found below for anyone in Thailand in need of a first class, professional photographer:

Eric Nelson Photography
086 343 1612
Powerpoint Portfolio Download: http://share.cx.com/zHf94N
PDF Portfolio Download: http://share.cx.com/B9CyY6
Email: emanphoto@ameritech.net

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John Gartland (Photo by Eric Nelson)

John Gartland (Photo by Eric Nelson)

Bangkok is full of interesting expatriates. Foreigners choosing to make Thailand their home for a variety of reasons. John Gartland is one such interesting expat. John was born in Warrington in Northern England. He graduated with honors in English from Newcastle University and has a master’s degree in Elizabethan drama. He has spent time in the United States, has worked in the government sector, in the telecommunications business, as a rock n’ roll music producer and as a college lecturer and professor. He has recently returned to live in Bangkok a second time after being Visiting Professor of English Writing at Korea National University of Education , and  Lecturer in English at  Bayan University College in Muscat.

Gravity's Fool - Poems by John Gartland

Gravity’s Fool – Poems by John Gartland

John Gartland is a published novelist and poet. Thailand Footprint is pleased to showcase some of his poems today along with the art of Chris Coles as well as photographs by Bangkok photographers, Eric Nelson and Aroon Thaewchatturat.

Portrait of poet, John Gartland by Bangkok Noir artist, ChrisColes

Portrait of poet, John Gartland by Bangkok Noir artist, Chris Coles

The Company of Poets

You’ve heard a kind of clown
dismissing poetry,
as rarefied and precious, not real life;
till, cut and sliced by love’s
exquisite and inexorable knife,
he’ll find the bottle comfortless enough,
and fumble in his misery for rhyme.

Still craving for some vanished stuff of rapture,
attempting to contain the heart’s decline,
and learning there’s no science that will capture
or can resurrect a passion. It’s a sign that life
will seek out rhythms, incantations, dreams,
to celebrate its stature, and to wonder at itself.
Each dances, in his fashion, to that driving score it seems;
but poets live the fuller, by their nature, beating time.

And I’ll seek out the company of poets,
the company of poets I’ll make mine.
When poetry has bitten you you’ll know it;
it’s just an arc of words but in the overall design
of things, there’s everything in life laid out below it;
from birth to love, and death, and celebration;
and before the robot reaper can consign
you to your headstone you will ride imagination’s
launcher high above the milling cities,
be the Process speaking, for a time.

So I’ll seek out the company of poets,
the company of poets I’ll make mine.
They’re taking passion’s pulse
and they are signaling the future,
they’ve freedom for a mistress
and they’ve history for a tutor,
and they can image water into wine.
Each new day is their holy book,
and apparatchiks hate them
for scoffing at all priesthoods
while embracing the divine.
So give to me the company of poets,
the company of poets I’ll make mine.

Those black flags of mourning, who better to fly them?
The tender intrigues of the aspirant heart,
that life-shaking love that you have for your children,
how better to tell them? Where better to start?
Where else but the company of poets?
whose alchemical pilgrimage sets them apart…
Where else but the company of poets?

Those ephemeral fires of the beacon lights,
on the century’s headlands, glowing;
like poems, are markers we leave to rite
our passage and our going.
Bright seeds on the wind that flower despite
the perennial cloud of unknowing,
and they’re sown by the company of poets,
the indelible company of poets.

John Gartland

Soi Cowboy by Chris Coles now found hanging, prominently, at CheckInn99 in Bangkok

Soi Cowboy by Chris Coles now found hanging, prominently, at CheckInn99 in Bangkok

Chillin’

Judas hangs about in lost property,
channel hopping.
Reality Arena, Caligula’s TV hit,
has viewers congealed to their seats.
“It’s the same old bread and circuses shit”,
says Herod, still regal, on the Oprah show.
He’ll be networked once he’s out, you know,
a degree in demographics from an Open prison;
now, when he speaks the media listen.
But that’s old hat; there’s wall to wall promotion
on all stations for “Hits the murderers listened to.”
Can you get into that?
A six album set, if you didn’t steal it already.
“Suffer Little Children”, whispers Myra Hindley
and the social workers nod,
chillin!’.
“I’m immortal now”, croons De Troux,
“Let bygones be bygones”, says God,
“I’m chillin’, I’m chillin’”.

My cap’s on backwards, I mastered rhyme.
It ain’t complicated, so rap’s just fine,
I’m a tattooed mother’ and an arrogant swine,
I beat my bitch and she toes my line,
I’ve got a big shooter and I fuck with crime,
got jewels in my teeth and I done some time,
I’m rich, you can kiss my asinine,
I’m chillin’, I’m chillin’.

After this word from our sponsor,
Al Jazeera, embedded with the Taliban!
More amputations and beheadings, live,
and our token woman journalist who
reads the news at five. Commercial break,
a woman’s lips through an embroidered slot,
“Something for the weekend?”
Adultery and a drink will get you stoned,
Or maybe you forgot.
Relax! to a cool, fanatic vibe.
Sheikh, rattle and rolling heads,
no moderates are left alive.
The anchorman’s just chillin’. “Clive,
Reminds me of the view from the Republican
window at the old Rue Robespierre.
(These people can teach Europe nothing
about losing your head in a crisis!)”
And now at last we take you there,
To Isfahan, a missile silo filled with
Mullahs’ radioactive teeth,
to seed an unbelieving west.
With business confidence so low,
where else can you invest but Club Inferno,
fastest growing franchaise, and the best.
Four horsemen drinking margaritas in the bar,
chillin’. Scythes gleam in the umbrella stand.
Then, strikes up the band
behind the President’s address
on the State of Rape and Roll,
and everyone’s in lost property now,
to watch. With closing time at hand,
the speech is kind of droll,
and chillin’, really chillin’.

John Gartland

Chris Coles Landscape

Chris Coles Landscape

Bangkok De Profundis.

In a time of rising waters,
He has cried to thee oh Lord.
It was becoming hard to bear,
waking up each morning as a cockroach.
His junkie girlfriend stole the laptop,
the phone kept ringing at odd hours,
and insomniacs haunted him,
invading his rooms to smoke Old Delirium
in strange contraptions, fashioned
from detergent bottles and glass tubing.

False prophets network,
scares and admonitions,
“Seek shelter from the coming flood”
for markets fall, and pundits pall
like necromancers shocked by futures,
awed at stocks’ exposed positions.

More flashbacks of those corpses wrapped
in blood-stained sheets where Hades
meets Suwintawong highway,
and demons dressed as strutting cops
play out satanic games with car wrecks
and six lanes of hurtling pick-ups,
loaded with the damned.
Nothing stops, apart from hoping,
in that darkness;
hoping, and the grand design of God.

Years of debris; a throwaway world
is gagging his high watermark.
The residue of empires, dismembered ideologies,
gangrenous mullahs,
severed heads in doggie bags,
girls stoned to death by dumper truck
where high tech. serves Islamic rigour;
and women’s bodies, feared
and lashed with equal vigour,
float the septic tide to state,
that, rotting, raped and subjugate,
masked, or beauty acid-scarred,
this jealous hate redeems some family’s honour
and the keeping of a slave.

“Seek shelter from the coming flood!”.
More warnings from the networks
of disaster in plain sight.
Infected by the future
and recoiling from the light,
from the morning watch,
to subliminal night, Lord,
he channel-hops the ads. and lies,
awaits the blind inexorable wave.

Let thine ears be attentive
to the voice of his supplication.
Please take his urgent call oh Lord,
extend to him religion’s consolation.

Icons of old wizard monks,
expensive relics in a locket,
the sacred, decorated trunks of
twisted, bent, revered old trees,
an idol, or a totem,
or the fetish of of a prophet,
an amulet of Vishnu,
or a string of merit-making beads
to finger in a pocket.
A road map of the Tree of Life,
a prayer mat, sacrificial knife,
a sacred stone they venerate,
a holy spring where they prostrate,
and, chanting loudly, flagellate;
some mutilation rituals they find,
somehow express their
tortured, ingrown toenail of a mind.

To these they bow, by these they wait,
for heaven’s ultimate blind date;
hypnosis by a holy book,
subservience to a priestly look.

Yea Lord, he drinks a bitter cup,
deliverance eludes him yet.
The creator, playing hard to get,
has, once more, frankly, stood him up.

Manipulation, thought correction,
machiavellian misdirection.
Digesting God’s indifference,
inhaling insignificance,
in times of rising waters,
a Minoan maze of lies.

The sacred books, the king, the host,
those feet at which men grovel most;
the bloodstained flag, the Holy Ghost,
the biggest fairy tales require
most pious genuflection,
and these the thinking cockroach
will contemptuously despise.

Insomniac transexuals
are texting, seeking parts again.
Awake within the whispering walls,
illumination swirls and falls
to fractals in a pipe bulb,
when, aware God’s not returning calls,
or dealing absolution,
he crawls out of the depths, not least
to shun the poisonous fix of priests,
and charter his own flight to dissolution.

For, Lord, he’s turned his back upon
some name we may not utter
without slavish self-abasement,
the mediaeval violence policing laws of love;
a million milling zealots
trampling by their sacred monolith;
psychosis aping saintliness,
when push comes to fanatic shove.

And the globalised multiplex; virtual reality,
brand slaves on Prozac grazing the mall.
Where history simply is discarded fashion,
junk’s TV, rap culture, and soundbite celebrities,
mainlining cage fights, an armchair in hell.
In a time of rising waters,
He has cried to thee, oh Lord.

Last call for oblivion, welcome aboard.

Let thine ears be attentive… attentive oh Lord!

Last call for oblivion, darkness on board.

John Gartland

Female Guardian of the Bangkok Night by Chris Coles

Female Guardian of the Bangkok Night by Chris Coles

ANNA JET

Anna glides among the drinkers
and her girls at Anna Jet.
The customers pay tribute with their eyes.

Her girls are young,
available and beautiful, and yet,
as she irradiates the storyline
of evening with her smile,
and lets her hand rest lightly
on some shoulder for a while,
her backless dress of silken gold’s
as tight as gilt upon
an art collector’s statuette.

Her girls are young,
available, and beautiful and yet,
it’s Anna with her silken style
who dances in the memory
while we cross the floating world
to Anna Jet.

Hot night, the bar that’s open
to the dealings of the street,
the techno music, short time girls,
a DJ who is seemingly determined
to defeat our death in this
sublime apotheosis of the dance.

I think of Wagner talking about Beethoven
and glance at strangers who
are dancing on their naked lives.
Here in the floating world, the dream survives;
drink deep, and dance, and banish sleep
for Anna shines among her girls
like some erotic statuette,
and it’s always short time, you can bet,
golden short time.
And the bass is driving nails
into the past
in Anna Jet.

John Gartland

Farang in theBangkok Night by Chris Coles

Farang in the Bangkok Night by Chris Coles

GRAVITY’S FOOL

When she leaves me,

and I’m ordinary again,

a flickering filament,

a melancholy solo

in a wasted hour;

a speech without conviction

in an empty auditorium,

a cherry blossom bough

that will not flower.

When she leaves,

this falling rocket coughs,

its motor won’t restart.

I’m gravity’s fool again;

just ordinary debris

destined soon to fall apart.

And her absences,

like tree rings,

all her absences

will show,

that day they open

my abandoned heart.

John Gartland

Bangkok Noir Artist, Chris Coles prepares for presentation - Photo by  Aroon Thaewchattura

Bangkok Noir Artist, Chris Coles prepares for presentation – Photo by Aroon Thaewchattura

For more information about the Poetry of John Gartland please visit Poetry Universe by clicking the photograph of John, below:

John Gartland on Sukhumvit Road, Bangkok (Photo by Eric Nelson)

John Gartland on Sukhumvit Road with some of the characters found in the Bangkok night. (Photo by Eric Nelson)

For more information regarding the art of Chris Coles, please visit: http://www.chriscolesgallery.com/ or his excellent blog, BANGKOK NOIR, consistently voted one of the Top Two Blog’s in all of Bangkok by clicking the Chris Coles painting below:

Farang Fashion Designer at Q-Bar by Chris Coles

Farang Fashion Designer at Q-Bar by Chris Coles

6 Comments
Wat Phra Non Chak Si Worawihan

Wat Phra Non Chak Si Worawihan

TF Eric, I am pleased to welcome you here at Thailand Footprint. I have just spent the last 30 minutes looking at a file of your photographs and I came away thoroughly impressed. The hardest part of this interview, I can already tell, will be selecting the 12 photographs I plan to run. I also have many questions for you, so here goes: Tell me about your interest in photography. How it started. How long you have been doing it. Has it been an avocation, a vocation or both?

Spirit House

Spirit House

EN Thank you Kevin, I’m excited to talk with you today.

My interest in photography came from an odd place. As a kid, I was an avid malacologist, i.e. collector and studier of specimen sea shells and the animals in them, buying from dealers all over the world. I wanted to do a slide presentation using the specimens I had in my collection at the time. My dad had a 35mm camera and tripod so I did a simple setup and photographed them. My interest in photography grew and the relationship between photography and shell collecting was a symbiotic one for a time till photography became my main interest. I no longer collect, and haven’t for over 40 years as the ocean needs all it’s animals intact, but I still have an extensive collection.

Photography has been both a vocation and an avocation, but for the last 30 years it’s mainly been a vocation and I’ve worked in many parts of the photo industry from commercial labs to photo journalism to studio, location, and stock photography and lastly owning and operating a custom B&W lab service in Chicago for 21 years, Archival Custom Printing- (ACP).

Barber with Mother at shop

Bangkok barber and mom at shop

TF  I was particularly struck by your photographs of Thailand and neighboring countries. I’d like to focus on three: Thailand; Myanmar and Cambodia. How are they similar and how are they different? How much time have you spent in Myanmar vs Cambodia?

Buddhists Monks proceed in Myanmar

Buddhists Monks proceed in Myanmar 

EN Of the 3 places you asked about, Myanmar is the most different from Thailand.  I don’t speak a word of Burmese but my Thai and English got me by somewhat.  People will smile back at you here in Thailand but in Myanmar they don’t.  They seemed more serious in some respects, seemed being the operative word there.
There’s something about the light there that’s different than Cambodia and Thailand.  Just like how in a place like New Mexico where the light has always been lauded, Myanmar’s light is somehow different than other SEA countries.  I liked shooting there a lot, but my trip was pretty short and insulated to make any more specific comparisons.  I’ve spent a total of 2 weeks in Cambodia at this point.
Cambodia’s light seemed a bit harsh even in the morning with haze, but mornings and evenings here in Thailand are great for shooting.  By getting shots with “window” light such as in the noodle shop image, one can escape the harsh look of midday sun here.
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Noddle shop located on Sukhumvit 101

Noodle shop located on Sukhumvit 101

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TF Tell me about Chicago, where you lived for many years, from a photographer’s perspective?
EN When I was in Chicago, the city became old and ugly to me and uninteresting photographically.  Many others will disagree and that’s great as there are photo opportunities there for those who can see them.  I just could not.  I think that can happen if you live somewhere too long.  I’ve always traveled to SEA just to shoot; for myself and for stock photography.  I’ve always been drawn to Asia with my camera.  5 months of the year in Chicago is inhospitable for shooting outside whether it be rain, snow or the cold.  I did a lot of studio shooting during my time there.
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Fisherman's Canal - Chicago

Michael Moore lookalike at Fisherman’s Canal – Chicago

TF  What is it about Bangkok that makes it such a fertile place to take photographs – how would you explain it? Help  others understand what makes it so great?

EN The key, I believe, is to get out each day, and see things with new eyes, like one newly arrived.  I don’t believe it is a bad thing at all as it keeps your vision fresh and one’s self interested.

Bangkok and Thailand for that matter is a great shooting destination.  Personally, I’m not that interested in shooting well known spots. One should go to the Grand Palace and so on once in their life for sure, but I’ve no inclination to return to well known “family vacation” destinations for my photography.  I find that almost any street here will do nicely.  There will be someone or something one can shoot.  People here are genuinely cooperative if not downright happy when I ask to take their photograph.  All one has to do is just go for a walk in your neighborhood and you’ll find fascinating things to shoot.  I’ve just moved to a new neighborhood and I’m looking forward to getting out and shooting here as there’s a large Muslim population and diverse groups of people living all around me.

Modes of transport here also fascinate me.  The boats and motocy taxis aren’t found in the US and where we have them (specifically boats) they are not utilitarian and geared more often to tourists.  In S.E.A. it’s just another way to get around and I love it.  I don’t drive here and hate even being a passenger in a car here.  I much prefer any other method to get places if it’s safe.  Those are opportunities to see the streets  and life in general in a different way instead of in an air con car w/tinted windows.  That and the fear-inducing traffic and driving styles here makes the trains and boats and walking much more appealing to me.
I try to keep myself open to as many subjects as possible whether it be people, places or things.  I do enjoy photographing people as there are some unique looks folks have here and in other countries in S.E.A.  People are much more approachable here than in the US where they don’t have time to stop for you or are just suspicious or irascible in general.
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Motorcy Taxi Drivers near BTS Stop

Bangkok Motorcy Taxi Drivers near BTS Stop

TF How has the digital age impacted your profession, both positively and negatively?

EN My lab, ACP was where I was negatively affected by the change to digital.  I had many clients up until the day I closed my doors who were trying to keep film alive, not just for it’s own sake but because it’s the way they liked to work and they preferred the look film gave them.
One day back in Chicago, I needed a cheap digital print and I uploaded the file to Walgreens, the national drug store chain, and within 15 minutes I got an email saying the print was ready at the store around the corner from me.  At that point I knew I could never compete with digital as handmade analog printing and processing takes time, and fewer and fewer people were willing to wait anymore.
I began offering drum scanning, digital-to-B&W film conversions via a 4×5 film recorder, and custom archival ink jet (digital) prints on rag paper, but even the cachet of the custom hands on printing and scanning was not enough to bring in a large volume of work as many photographers are making those prints and scans in their own studios, and others are just sending their work to Walgreens or the like as the quality isn’t that important for a lot of work.  Also the need to go to print at all, all but disappeared in advertising and commercial photography.
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Siem Reap, Cambodia

Siem Reap, Cambodia

TF What is the best photographing advice you have ever received?

Bicyclist in Cambodia

Bicyclist in Cambodia

EN Best photographic advice is my own as well, which is to keep shooting.  Whatever it is you want to shoot, whether film or digital, just keep at it.

Buddhist Funeral

Buddhist Funeral

TF Do you have any projects in the works? What is your ideal photographing assignment? Do you prefer freelance work over model shoots or is it a balance that you strive for?
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EN I have two teaching projects in their early stages right now both requiring my darkroom + digital.  The first is to teach some folks here how to do wet plate photography.  The major stumbling block I’ve run into there is the chemistry.  Shipping from my suppliers in the US is very expensive and it’s arrival is iffy at best.  One supplier told me of a shipment he made to Singapore that took 3 months to arrive.  So I’m in search of companies that have the needed chemistry here in Thailand.
The other project is to teach alternative photo printing techniques such as cyanotypes or salted paper, using negatives made with a digital printer.  These historical processes require the negative to be the size of the image you want as the negatives are printed in contact with the paper.  Working from scans or digital files to print onto overhead transparency material allows one to easily make these large negatives.
Actually still life and product shoots interest me more than model shoots as those depend heavily on the talent and support people such as hair and make up.  I enjoy model shoots for a sideline as I can do pretty much whatever I want.
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Bangkok Shophouse

Bangkok Shop House

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TF If you had not been a professional photographer, can you imagine what other profession, in the arts, you might have liked to try?

EN I’m really at a loss to think of any profession other than photography!

Bangkok photographer Eric nelson arrives at the scene of a crime ... or perhaps he was already there?

Bangkok photographer Eric Nelson ponders what other profession he might enjoy as much as photography … detective, perhaps?

TF Thank-you, Eric for sharing your pictures and thoughts on photography at Thailand Footprint. Continued success to you in the great city of Bangkok, Thailand.

EN My pleasure, Kevin. I enjoyed it.

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You can reach Bangkok based photographer Eric Nelson at his email address: Eric Nelson <emanphoto@ameritech[dot]net for information about his photographs and services or at the links below:

Eric Nelson Photography
086 343 1612
Powerpoint Portfolio Download: http://share.cx.com/zHf94N
PDF Portfolio Download: http://share.cx.com/B9CyY6
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