“Serendipity is what this is all
about.”
Jordan Matter
Jordan Matter
Prior to
becoming a photographer the New Yorker, Jordan
Matter was an actor with a photographic hobby. Now his day job is as a publicity
photographer specializing in head shots for aspiring and established actors.
As he says
on his website “One day I was at a friend’s house, looking through her
headshots. Not one photograph said the slightest thing about her. They were
very generic, very studio and very boring. When she told what she had paid, I
almost choked on my Starbucks. Outrageous! I’ve been the victim of that a few
times myself. The next day I grabbed my camera, took her up to the roof and
fired off two quick rolls before the sun set. That was it. I was hooked,
whether I knew it or not.”
It was a
hook that saw Matter realize that success lay in creating a collaborative relationship
with his client that will allow the serendipitous moments to occur.
As he explains
in the video A Day in my Life
“You just allow the environment to inspire you to an idea, as cheesy as that
sounds. So you look around, you see what’s available to you, what kind of story
you want to tell and find a way to tell the story.”
It is this
approach to his craft that Matter carries over to his private projects of which
two, Uncovered and Dances Among Us, have been published as
books with the latter making it onto the New York Times Bestselling Books list
in 2012.
In both
instances Matter has in whole or in part used the streets and public places of
New York as the backdrop for his subjects’ performances.
With Uncovered Matter photographed a wide
variety of topless women in various public locations around the city. He was inspired
by the overreaction to Janet Jackson’s Super Bowl wardrobe malfunction.
As one of Matter’s
models, Margret Kaiser told the New
York Daily News “It was really wild and really fun… Other people didn’t
know what we were doing. It was really playful.”
To which
Matter added “A lot of people walk right by and don’t even notice,” which he
said was the initial point of the exercise. That it became a liberating
experience for the participants was an added bonus.
For Dances Among Us Matter has photographed
ballet dancers strutting their stuff not only in New York but in other places
both rural and urban. Inspired by watching his three year old son playing
Matter wanted to recreate that wonder and the excitement of the world and after
seeing an dance performance he realized he had found his collaborators.
As he says
in his artist’s
statement for the project “Dancers are storytellers. Their trained to capture
passion with their bodies. They often create a fantasy world or offer us a
deeper look into familiar settings. They bring to life what we feel but what
most of us, lacking their artistry and athleticism, are unable to express
physically. I spent three years shooting dancers around the country and I was
humbled by their enthusiasm for their craft.”
The
exhibition Dancers
Among Us: Photographs by Jordan Matter
is currently on show at New York’s Hudson River
Museum until the 17th of January next year.
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