Author: admin

  • San Francisco/Oakland


    One Rincon Hill and the Clocktower on the approach to the Bay Bridge — © Brian Rose

    Back in San Francisco to complete shooting projects for architect David Baker. I drove up 101 through the city and headed directly for the Bay Bridge over to Oakland where I would be photographing a development called Tassafaronga Village. As I approached the bridge I snapped a view of the Clocktower, the location of Baker’s office and an early live/work loft project he designed, and on the left One Rincon Hill, a glitzy sixty story apartment tower that competes with the Transamerica Pyramid form dominance on the skyline of San Francisco.


    Jack London Square — © Brian Rose

    I was spending the first night in Oakland because virtually all of San Francisco’s hotels were booked, and besides, it would give me a head start on my shoot in the morning. I decided to stay in the Jack London District on the waterfront of Oakland. It’s a schizophrenic place–on the one hand an authentic urban environment with converted loft buildings, wholesale produce market, and various watering holes and restaurants. On the other hand, it is the scene of an ill-conceived urban renewal project called Jack London Square, which emulated similar waterfront developments in other cities around the U.S. On the evening I arrived, Jack London Square felt rather desolate.

    Across the street from my hotel was a bar called Beer Revolution with a deck out front full of young people who seemed to know that this was exactly the place to be. I felt out of place, so I skipped Beer Revolution and wandered around the neighborhood. I ended up a while later standing in front of the reconstructed cabin of Jack London–one of two, it seems, made partially from the original logs of his cabin in the Alaskan wilderness. It now sits stranded among rows of palm trees adjacent to Heinhold’s First and Last Chance, a bar frequented by London, in all its battered drunken sailor glory, marooned, as it were, in the midst of modern office buildings.


    Jack London mural — © Brian Rose

    On the side of Heinhold’s is a mural dedicated to Jack London emblazoned with the quote, “The function of man is to live, not to exist.” Although I appreciate the effort to honor Oakland’s greatest writer, I am afraid that London’s memory exists in Jack London Square more than it lives.

    A bit further on I stood astonished as two passenger trains and a freight lumbered down 1st Street horns blaring–cars and pedestrians apparently on their own with regard to safety. Scampering with alacrity across the street I began walking in front of the Jack London Cinema when my trained New York eye caught the familiar gray blur of a rat. I stopped dead in my tracks as the rather large critter crossed the sidewalk in front of me, scampered up the steps of the theater, and darted through the main lobby entrance. (Going to a movie I suppose.) Immediately, shrieks and screams burst from inside. At that point I decided I’d had enough of Jack London Square–for the present anyway–and made a beeline for my hotel.

  • New Yeork/Chelsea


    New York pizza joint — © Brian Rose

    Without comment.

  • New York/JFK Airport


    Jet Blue baggage claim area — © Brian Rose


    Former TWA terminal designed by Eero Saarinen — © Brian Rose

    Back in New York after a week in the San Francisco Bay Area. I was unable to complete my assignments because the weather did not cooperate. I had to get back to NY to meet other obligations, and am heading back to San Francisco tomorrow with a good weather forecast.

    Top photo, waiting for my equipment in the Jet Blue baggage area–under construction. Bottom photo, catching a cab, the wonderful TWA terminal, thankfully preserved as an icon of modern architecture.

  • San Francisco/Bayview-Hunter’s Point


    Armstrong Senior Housing — © Brian Rose

    Amstrong Senior Housing by architect David Baker.


    Brian Rose in front of Armstrong Senior Housing — © Chris Gallagher

    After several beautiful days, the weather has not cooperated. I spent an entire day battling intermittent fog trying to photograph Armstrong Senior Housing on 3rd Street in Bayview, San Francisco. The picture above was made in weak sunlight with a mostly white sky behind. Not what I want for this brightly colored facade.

    As you can see, I’m still using the 4×5 view camera, but I don’t know how much longer I will do it. The current plan is to keep using the big camera for my personal projects, and go to digital for client assignments. I don’t relish returning to loading holders after a couple of decades of using pre-packaged film. Fuji has stopped producing the film, though there is enough in the stores to last six months or so.


    Armstrong Senior Housing — © Brian Rose

    The courtyard with David Baker signature red door.


    Armstrong Senior Housing and light rail station — © Brian Rose

    Bayview-Hunter’s Point, a largely low income neighborhood–mostly African American–feels remote from the rest of the city although a light rail line along 3rd Street has greatly improved its accessibility.


    Armstrong Avenue — © Brian Rose

    The house above with the orange windows is used as a church. While I was there, dozens of people, mostly Asians, came running from all directions with carts and bags to pick up free food being distributed in the church parking lot.

    The following day was little better with substantial cloud cover much of the day. I did several pictures of the courtyard, and managed to catch the sun peeking through a few times. But at this point I have to return to New York to meet other obligations. I’ll be headed back to San Francisco as quickly as possible to complete the work.

  • San Francisco


    Random San Francisco street images — © Brian Rose

    Without comment.

  • Healdsburg/San Francisco

    h2hotel in Healdsburg, designed by David Baker, is a beautiful hotel–a relaxed environment where every design detail has been thought out. I’ll post some images of the building when I get the 4×5 film developed. But here are some interesting bits and pieces.


    h2hotel, Healdsburg, California — © Brian Rose

    An undulating green roof echoes the nearby hills.


    h2hotel, Healdsburg, California — © Brian Rose

    A basketball floor dismantled and randomly reassembled.


    h2hotel, Healdsburg, California — © Brian Rose

    Architect David Baker’s  signature red doors.

  • San Francisco/Healdsburg


    Spoonbar, h2hotel, Healdsburg, California — © Brian Rose

    Drove north from San Francisco to Healdsburg to photograph a hotel designed by architect David Baker. After a day’s shooting I ended up with my assistant parked at the hotel bar along the street.

  • San Francisco


    7th Street, San Francisco — © Brian Rose

    Sorry for the recent absence. I am now in San Francisco shooting various projects around the Bay Area. Heading up to Healdsburg, today, to photograph a hotel. More pictures to come.

  • New York/World Trade Center

    Fire Department of New York Memorial Wall (4×5 film) © Brian Rose

    A newly scanned image of the FDNY Memorial Wall.  When I made this photo a couple of winters ago, I was struck by the expanse of blank wall above the horizontal bas relief of the WTC image and firefighters. A soldier accompanied by family or friends walked into my frame. While construction proceeds on the footprint memorials and museum nearby, this is one of the few official acknowledgements of  9/11 downtown. The wall is currently roofed over by a sidewalk shed due to construction and demolition going on in the area.

    As the 9th anniversary of 9/11 approaches, Iraq remains a battleground, despite the withdrawal of American combat forces, and the war against the Taliban in Afghanistan goes on, endlessly. Right wingers agitate against an Islamic cultural center several blocks from ground zero, and Christian extremists threaten to burn Korans–hatred engendered by the act of hatred nine years ago.

  • New York/Williamsburg


    Renée on the balcony — © Brian Rose

    Beautiful weather in New York for the holiday weekend.

  • New York/Lower East Side


    Second Avenue and E3rd Street — © Brian Rose

    Without comment.

  • New York/Lower East Side


    Eldridge Street — © Brian Rose

    Without comment.

  • New York/Lower East Side


    Division Street (4×5 film) — © Brian Rose

    A couple of weeks ago, Blake Andrews, a very fine photographer from Eugene, Oregon, wrote about the photo above from my book Time and Space on the Lower East Side. It’s almost embarrassing to call attention to his generous remarks, but I’m doing my best to promote this project, so I won’t avoid pointing it out whenever someone says something nice.

    From Andrews’ blog:

    What a shot! Everything layered and lined up just right, the weird textured chainlink and confusing tritone lamp, cars and buildings jutting at weird angles, and that little red hat balanced right where the center cannot hold. And best of all, it’s a photo of absolutely nothing! It’s everyday material. Ninety-nine out of a hundred photographers would walk right by. Not only did Rose stop but he found the one exact spot from which the shot comes together. One inch in any direction would put it out of whack. Who knows, maybe one second in any direction would do the same.

    Read the whole thing here.

  • New York/World Trade Center

    World Trade Center and Woolworth Building, 1982 (4×5 film) — © Brian Rose/Ed Fausty

    One key image of the World Trade Center that I did with Ed Fausty in 1982 has been missing for many years.  I’ve been through every negative I have from that period of time. The 4×5 is definitely gone forever. Recently, however, I found a print of that image in one of my boxes–a 16×20, slightly yellowed, but otherwise in pretty good shape.

    I have scanned the print at high resolution, and the much reduced jpeg can be seen above. My vantage point is somewhere on the raised plaza of Police Headquarters–not sure that the same spot can still be reached. To the right above the trees is the cupola of City Hall, and the spire of St. Paul’s is center left.

    Be sure to click on the photo for a larger view.

  • New York/Greenpoint

    Random photographs while walking around Greenpoint, Queens a few days back.


    Franklin Street — © Brian Rose


    Franklin Street —  Brian Rose


    Franklin Street — © Brian Rose


    Commercial Street — © Brian Rose


    Commercial Street — © Brian Rose

  • New York/World Trade Center


    Battery Park City and 2 WTC, 1981 — © Brian Rose

    After completing the original Lower East Side project in 1981, Ed Fausty and I were asked to join several other photographers in documenting Lower Manhattan–funded by the National Endowment for the Arts. Initially we worked together, as with the LES photos, but eventually began shooting independently. Many of the images included the World Trade Center, some of which can be seen here. I am in the process of rescanning everything at higher resolution–I’ve also gotten a lot better on Photoshop and want to rework the images I did four or five years ago. The image above was never printed or scanned until now.

  • New York/World Trade Center


    St. Nicholas Church, 1981 (4×5) — © Brian Rose/Ed Fausty

    In midst of the furor about the proposed Islamic center a few blocks from ground zero, the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese has held a press conference to call attention to the long stalled rebuilding of St. Nicholas’s Church, which was destroyed on 9/11.

    From the Times:

    At a news conference near the trade center site, church officials appeared with former Gov. George E. Pataki and a Greek-American Congressional candidate from Long Island — both opponents of the Islamic center — to make their case: Government officials who appear to be clearing the way for the center, which includes a mosque, are blocking the reconstruction of St. Nicholas Church, the only house of worship destroyed in the terrorist attacks.

    Beautiful. Let’s all get as nakedly political as possible.

  • New York/Greenpoint


    Commercial and Franklin Streets, Greenpoint, Brooklyn — © Brian Rose

    An abandoned factory building from the 1930s, and now an environmental superfund site. Made plastic sheeting. Very simple moderne architecture–unlandmarked. Very difficult to track down much on the building, but found this in the Brooklyn Paper. And this from the New York Times. The chain of ownership with regard to this property may be more complicated than the articles imply–who or what is 49 Dupont Realty, the owner of the property and many others nearby. And neither article addresses the legal responsibility of the owners, past or present, for allowing chemical storage tanks to leak into the ground water.