Review: Photographs by Ole Christiansen

Ole Christiansen, Photographs
Front page of the book. Iggy Pop obviously.

Danish photographer Ole Christiansen, born 1955, has created portraits of more and less famous people for 40 years. In this book a number of black and white portrait photographs are presented, along with a few images of street / architecture. However, the bulk of the book is portraits.

Ole Christiansen presents a mixture of Danish and international celebrities. Iggy Pop, Leonard Cohen, David Byrne and Yoko Ono are examples and shows that he apparently has a name internationally. But also people that are “world famous in Denmark” are portraits, such as Lars von Trier and former Danish prime minister Poul Schlüter.

Ole Christiansen, Photographs
Former Danish prime minister Poul Schlüter.

Ole Christiansen often uses hard light, which is normally not what you would use for (flattering) photography. But Ole’s project seems take the approach that the character of the person is key rather than beauty or a wrinkle free look.

Ole Christiansen, Photographs
Leonard Cohen, Obviously. Closed eyes.

You can find a few double exposures amongst the images in this book, and Ole does not shy away from using props such as mirrors, a record or a piece of paper. Or the subjects hand (see the front page with Iggy Pop).

However, for me, the most stunning images are the “simple” ones using a single hard light source to draw out and amplify the personality of the subject photographed. Even though his ability to put vivid focus on the eyes of the subject is stellar, you’ll also find images where the subject has eyes closed or is viewed in profile, i.e. not looking into the lens.

Ole Christiansen, Photographs
Hard light right, more classic portrait left.

If you like portraits and B&W images, this books comes highly recommended. There are also a number of street / architecture images, but for me the important work here is the portraits. There is no text other than a small introduction to Ole Christiansen on the cover page – this is a book with only images. Just the way I like it.

Related reading

Review: Looking East, portraits by Steve McCurry.

Review: Ravens by Masahisa Fukase

Can a flash zoom? And what is the point?

Follow the lens…

Not all flashes has the ability to zoom, but some do, like speedlites from Godox or Yongnuo. The point is to send the light in the same direction as the lens is “looking”. Sending the light wide if the lens is zoomed in at a narrow field of view does not make much sense, and vice versa.

Here the flash is zoomed in at 200mm and the light only covers a small area of the wall.
Here the flash is at 24mm and the light covers a good part of the wall.

The flash can follow the lens on the camera if in TTL mode and adapt the same zoom as the lens, provided it stays within the range the flash can follow (typically 20-200 mm). Notice that if the flash has the built in wide angle diffuser engaged, then the zoom is locked in its widest position.

You can also set the zoom manually just like you can set the flash power manually – in the images above I did just that to illustrate the difference between the two flash zoom positions without changing the zoom on the lens (the Nikon 24-70/4 S by the way).

Related reading

Flash photography – why bother?

What is the wide-angle diffuser in your flash?