I rarely post about my personal life on the blog but today I am going to. Tonight my oldest son will celebrate senior night for the baseball team at his high school. I was asked to make portraits of each of the senior players on the team. I was thrilled to be asked and more excited to actually do it. They are a group of great young men. Andrew is 18 now. He has played baseball for as long as I can remember. We have spent countless hours watching him behind the plate. It’s bitter sweet that tonight we get to walk onto the field with him and be honored along side him. Good job Andrew. Your Mom and I could not be more proud.
I spent the past weekend in Southern California shooting new work for my portfolio. It was a great weekend. I had a great crew helping to make the magic happen. After a flight delay we returned to Dallas at 3 a.m. this morning. Looking through the resulting images, I realize how beneficial it can be to step away from the usual and spend 36 hours creating in a new location.
Our studio is located in a great neighborhood known as the Design District. Some of our neighbors rank among the most creative people in the city. Today’s Friday Friend is Eliseo, our neighbor two buildings down from the studio. Eliseo is an international sculptor honored by the State of Texas as the 2009 3D Visual Artist of the Year for his creations in stone and steel. Eliseo creates amazing large public art, works in metal and is a great painter. He involves the public in a lot of his work. People who know nothing about art to people who are experts are invited to his studio to help carve along side him. We always know when a large flat bed semi is rolling down our street with a huge piece of stone on the bed that magic is about to happen.
Name: Eliseo
Current Location: Dallas, Texas
Day Job: Sculptor (Stone, Metal, Bronze)
Guilty Pleasure: During the hot summer months when it’s too hot to carve in the middle of the day, I like to occasionally take a break from the studio and go to the movie theater to see an adventure or horror movie.
Favorite meal: I’m not very sophisticated when it comes to food. Mexican and Chinese food are great, but I really can eat pizza just about any time.
What inspires you? Most of my work is inspired by family, my heritage, spirituality, and nuances in nature. I’m also constantly inspired by feelings – feelings that I have about my relationships with others and relationships I sense between others. My hopes are that my artwork will promote philosophical, psychological, and spiritual exploration.
What art do you most identify with? I like to look and walk around three-dimensional forms, so I kind of gravitate toward many types and styles of sculpture. On the other hand, I’m also a painter, so I also identify with large-scale figurative or abstract paintings.
What is your strongest childhood memory? The tornado that hit Dallas in April of 1957. We were living in West Dallas and I remember my single mom was at work when the tornado touched down. My sister, brother, and I, along with many other people, were running house to house, street to street, trying to get to a ditch by the West Trinity levee with the tornado bearing down on us. I was nine years old, but I’ve never forgotten that experience.
What music are you currently listening to? I constantly change the stations on my radio looking for music that will jump start my energy as I work throughout the day. The music that inspires me while I work is as varied as my artwork; I paint and I sculpt, and my work is both figurative and abstract. Likewise, I enjoy all types of music. My favorite music, though, is from the 50s-60s era, as well as Ranchera and Bolero music, which always make me want to dance while I work.
What are you passionate about? I have a personal saying that states, “I create to create.” I know it probably doesn’t make sense, but it’s my way of expressing my belief that true art comes from the heart. It is important to work spontaneously and effortlessly, and let go of the mental and emotional limitations that keep me from creating artwork which lacks substance, meaning, and spirit.
A place that you think desperately needs public art? This may sound crazy, but since it won’t be for pedestrians, wouldn’t it be great to install some form of figurative three-dimensional sculpture at both of the entrances of the Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge designed by Santiago Calatrava? Maybe even sprinkle a few on the bridge? Art purists would probably shudder at the thought, but what better way to seal the bridging “connection” concept of downtown Dallas with the West Dallas community?
What else should we know about you? My family and close friends know that I’m really a shy person. I have to work hard to be social and outgoing. I love to dance but I’m a terrible dancer. As for my art, there are more subtle meanings in my work than most people think. For example, a Mother and Child sculpture may seem simply an expression of universal love, but it can also be interpreted as a symbol or metaphor for the relationship between Mother Earth, Humanity, and our place.
You can read more about Eliseo and his work on his website www.sculptoreliseo.com.
As an advertising photographer you know that you’ve hit the jackpot when you have a great Account Executive on your shoot. Frank is just that. Great. He’s got his clients back and he’s even had my back when things were looking shady in a bar one night. Frank goes the extra mile – and it’s always appreciated.
Name: Frank Caltabiano
Current Location: Brooklyn, NY
Day Job: Vice President, Account Supervisor
What is your Guilty Pleasure? Expensive NYC restaurants
What is your all-time favorite meal? Spaghetti and meatballs
What inspires you? My family and my city
What art do you most identify with? Vintage urban photography
What is your strongest childhood memory? Summers at the Jersey Shore
What music are you currently listening to? British folk, Irish punk, and the Black Keys
What are you passionate about? My family, my work and football (soccer to all those NFL fans)
Predictions for this year’s baseball season? Yankees/Cardinals World Series and a 28th world championship for the Yankees
What else should we know about you? I’m Italian so I’m very passionate about a lot of things. I love my family. Whether it’s my Wife, my Mom, Grandma or Sister, or my In-Laws, the most important thing to me is to keep them happy. But I love taking time to watch sports and I love going back to my college roots (I studied film) and getting lost in a movie. And zombies. I love zombies.
The weather in Dallas yesterday was gorgeous. A lunch meeting was on the calendar so we took it outside to the patio at Patrizio’s in Highland Park Village. I shot this image with my iPhone. Isn’t great to always have a camera with you to capture the little things?
We have a lot of fun while we are working. In fact this image is of the agency producer all dressed up and ready to sit in as a piano player. Some of my favorite outtakes from jobs that I shoot are the ones where the crew and clients are all having a great time. You can’t fake that in a photograph.
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