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(soft piano music)
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(mellow jazz music)
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- It's been 20 years,
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since I took the last pictures from here.
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I spent three-four years photographing
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this incredible view of the
Bay over and over again.
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Take this out.
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Put the film in.
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I was stunned.
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You'd think that the Golden Gate Bridge
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would always look the same.
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It's never the same.
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When I look back on my
works, it's a time machine.
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It triggers memories
that otherwise are gone.
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(muffled chatter)
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- I met Richard at a dinner
party at Thanksgiving.
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(switch clicks)
(projector whirs)
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But we really clicked
when I did a story on him
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for Mother Jones about the bombing range
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that he was working on.
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I have actually written a
lot about our lives together,
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on the road.
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At some point, I'm not
sure if I should read that.
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- And action.
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- It has been 12 years
now of this adventure
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joining Richard on his
travels to remarkable sites.
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What stands out most,
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the post-apocalyptic
landscape of Bravo 20.
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Its stillness of things
obsessively, methodically destroyed.
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His affinity for the desert runs deep.
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A landscape many consider a wasteland.
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Nothing could be further from the truth.
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Here, the earth is alive,
simultaneously old and new.
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There are salt beds as bright as snow
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and silver-green pickets, white dunes,
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and rock formations as improbable
as any modern sculpture.
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He was incredibly passionate
about everything that he did
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and he also had a great sense of humor.
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♪ Moo, moo ♪
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♪ I saw you standing alone ♪
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♪ Without a calf of your own ♪
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They've never run away
from me before. (chuckles)
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- I think the whole thing
was rather enchanting.
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(mellow jazz music)
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- Eric, I'm coming down.
We can pin up somethin'.
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- Okay.
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- In the early days,
Myriam traveled with me.
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Otherwise, nobody's ever gone with me
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across the country to take pictures.
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She went to the dead
animal pit, bombing ranges,
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the nuclear test site.
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It's freezing in here.
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These were a lot of
places where I was very
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politically involved, as
well as photographically.
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- In the early days he asked
me something about a photograph
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and I said, "Well, it's beautiful."
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And he said, "'Beautiful'
is an empty signifier."
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I went, "Oh, okay."
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- I know that the viewer can't
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think what I'm thinking and that's fine.
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They're not supposed to.
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But I wanted everything I created here
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to have a conceptual foundation.
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- He can't help it.
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Even when it's something
incredibly beautiful,
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he will always find some
sort of significance.
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We've always gone to the
same place in Hawaii,
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but he only thought about photographing
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the water after 9/11.
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He looked down and he saw these bodies.
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- You see these small figures
in this vast sublime ocean
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and you realize how vulnerable we are.
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Photographs, when they're made,
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can shift meaning with time, and often do.
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There's lots of pictures I
like right away, but I know
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that I'm gonna change my mind.
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So I shoot them. I test them.
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I make small prints.
Then I make large prints.
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Then I kind of put 'em away,
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sometimes for a year or two years.
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Then I can see them really
fresh, like for the first time.
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(peaceful music)
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- In the warehouse, which
serves as Richard's studio
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and was, until recently, our home,
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there is a long dark corridor,
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laden with shelves of
negatives and contact prints.
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Tens of thousands of them.
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Most of them will never
see the light of day
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but they all harbor
the potential for life.
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I think of them as dormant witnesses.
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Each one, a record of a
single moment and place.
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For me, knowing that Richard will not,
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cannot throw them away,
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adds to the mystery of the
photographer's process.
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(cardboard scrapes)
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- On these shelves are about
30,000 eight-by-ten negatives
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that have never been printed before.
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On this side here are boxes of contacts.
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There are so many gems in there.
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I found these beautiful images
I'd never printed before.
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This is my beautiful wife,
Myriam, in the desert.
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When I made these, I
couldn't really print them
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because they might have had a scratch,
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or the color might have been off.
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So I put them away and
I didn't throw them out.
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Now today, with digital technologies,
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it's possible to scan them and fix errors.
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Oh, look at these night skies.
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I've never printed these before.
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(mellow jazz music)
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- I just think he senses
that time is running out
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and he just wants to do more.
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He's become more experimental.
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He's open to pushing more boundaries.
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Just letting go of some of the structures
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that he'd lived by in the past.
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It's just like, "No, why not?"
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You know? Why not do that?
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Just, just break the rules.
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(energetic piano music)
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- Got it.
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Let's slide this one down that way.
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Part of my routine for many,
many years is for me to drive
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for two or three weeks
looking for photographs.
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In the meantime, though, I
have done experimental bodies
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of work over the years
that kind of shake me up,
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make me think about things differently.
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I would say that this
photograph comes out of that
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experimentation mode.
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The original image is like
twigs and branches on vegetation
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with a technique that I use in Photoshop
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to separate the color values.
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It unnormalizes it and allows
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for different kinds of interpretation.
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In some respects, this neuron scrub
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could look like a Jackson
Pollock painting, but it doesn't.
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You still have some realism there.
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You still have some
semblance of natural forms
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that you recognize.
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It's been interesting.
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Recently, I was commissioned
to do all of the art
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for the Pritzker Psychiatric
Clinic in San Francisco
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that's just being built and
I couldn't travel for that.
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- COVID happened at that
moment, and so what to do?
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He couldn't go out there
and photograph anew.
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He had to mine what he already had.
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- I got all the kinds of
ideas of taking old images
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and rethinking them in ways
I'd never thought about before.
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- "How can I bring life into them?"
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And before you know it,
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he was looking at all sorts of things
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that he probably would not ever
ever have considered before.
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Every day, he'd be sitting there and say,
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"Oh, you can't imagine what I found.
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Come and look at that.
Come and look at that."
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- I would make thousands of
experiments with Photoshop.
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I would just play with them,
experiment, fool around.
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Variations on variation.
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And the whole project took off from there.
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(mellow percussive music)
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- One of the big challenges
that we face in psychiatry
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in general, in medicine,
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and in really embracing
psychiatry's part of medicine,
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is this lack of care and respect
for inpatient facilities.
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There's just a very direct
opportunity to use art
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to say that we care.
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Beauty is important.
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We really hope that anyone
who walks in the door here
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can be uplifted by the
physical environment.
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That all of that will
contribute a sense of optimism
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and hope.
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- I'm in awe of the fact that
the Pritzker Clinic picked me.
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A lot of my work is very tough work.
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Things that could be a potential trigger.
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Not the kind of thing you would expect
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in a psychiatric clinic.
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I've dealt with very,
very challenging issues.
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Cancer alley, petrochemical
America, the border wall.
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But I always wanted to balance that
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with really beautiful things.
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Like the sea.
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Sky pictures.
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The Golden Gate Bridge.
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It's like a foil against the
darker projects that I've done.
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(distant waves crash)
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50 years, looking back,
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I realized I needed beauty in my life.
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- When he senses a photograph to be taken,
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his attention turns away
from everything else.
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"Time out", he asks politely.
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His face takes on a weird, strained air.
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It's the sort of face you make
when you're completely alone,
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unselfconscious.
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If he feels that you're
watching, he smiles,
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and occasionally apologizes.
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(camera shutter clicks)
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He is unsparing in his determination.
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Hours go by.
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He waits.
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We all wait.
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He waits for the light to do things.
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Things he has learned to
expect from experience.
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"Look over there", he'll call out,
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pointing to a section of cloudy sky.
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"In about five minutes,
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the light is going to be incredible."
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Often, there are surprises.
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(mellow jazz music)
(camera shutter clicks)
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(camera shutter clicks)
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(camera shutter clicks)
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(camera shutter clicks)