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Walking and Talking with Ricky Powell - The Lazy Hustler

April 27, 2020 by Bryce Richardson in Travel, Stories

“Come, Come,” Ricky Powell said as we followed him out the door of Eva’s Kitchen on West 8th in Greenwich Village, “I’ll take you to my oasis, Washington Square Park.” 

Several hours earlier, my friend Matt Reyes and I were shaking off the cobwebs in a booth at Kellogg’s Diner in Brooklyn as we prepared to hop on the L Train to Manhattan. The obsessive in me had pored over interviews with our subject, legendary New York street photographer and Beastie Boys documentarian, Ricky Powell. “What the fuck do I even ask him?” I bemoaned as I scribbled questions in a notebook next to a plate of eggs and hashbrowns. “Let’s just see what he has to say,” Matt responded.

We were ostensibly in New York to cover a bike race in Red Hook later in the week, but we had somehow managed to get ahold of Ricky who graciously agreed to meet up with us. Our original concept was “Four Blocks With…” where we’d take a quick stroll around the block, get a couple quippy answers and be done. Instead, Ricky took us on an hours-long, in-depth tour of Greenwich Village, the neighborhood where he had lived since the 60s.

The Lower Manhattan sky was a thick and uniform gray as we met up with Ricky at his favorite deli, Eva’s. Home to a permanent installation of his photographs of everyone from Run DMC to Andy Warhol to a young Laurence Fishbourne, Eva’s gave Ricky the honor of a signature “falafel burrito” called “The Lazy Hustler”, named after his self applied sobriquet. 

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That contradiction defines everything that makes Ricky successful. He’s lazy, but he’s a hustler. He’s always behind the camera but he’s gregarious and outgoing. He’s at once self deprecating and self aggrandizing. As we sat in Washington Square Park, he regaled us with stories of touring Europe with the Beastie Boys and rubbing elbows with Basquiat through mouthfuls of falafel burrito, letting glops of tzatziki drop down onto his meticulously selected outfit.

As we drifted from the basketball court where he spent his childhood summers to the grade school he attended with Ad Rock, it became apparent that he is a man of affectations. Striking his signature “jazzy lean” in any photo, two fingers pinched like they’re bringing a joint up to his lips, one leg crossed in front of the other. Peppering phrases like, “Oh Dip!” and “Come, Come” into his stream of consciousness narrative while we walk. To some, these idiosyncrasies may come off as disingenuous, a wall put up between the world and the kid from the Village who spent his days sneaking out onto the rooftops and dreaming over lower Manhattan.

When you meet him, though, you realize all of these repeated phrases and poses are like riffs that build the base for improvisation in the jazzy way he moves through the day. That’s what made him an ideal candidate to walk up to Warhol and Keith Haring and snap their picture, or create some of the most iconic imagery of one of the world’s most influential rap groups. He’s able to push and pull the situation with effortless nonchalance. Waiting to feel the vibe, but ready to take the solo if he gets the nod. One moment he’s pulling up pictures on his phone, showing us where he snapped a legendary Beasties photo, the next he’s chatting up a homeless dude who asked why Ricky was important enough to have someone with a camera following him around. “I’m just Joe Schnook from the neighborhood candy store,” he replies before taking a picture with the guy, sporting his signature jazzy lean.

But that veneer is not impenetrable. As we spent the day with him, perusing the places he’s been hanging out since childhood, Ricky opened up about his fears for the future, concerns over a recent heart attack, and the ramifications of his hard-partying lifestyle. In classic fashion, however, he quickly brushed off these apprehensions as, “feelin’ kinda Art Garfunkel” and flirted with an octogenarian, asking if he could buy her an ice cream cone.

At the end of our walk, Ricky spent some time listening to the jazz station on a small, shortwave radio that he keeps at low volume in his pocket at all times. Staring into puddles, taking pictures of his shoes, and excitedly talking about Richard “Groove” Holmes when his 1966 classic, “Living Soul” comes over the airwaves. When we finally parted ways, I nudged Matt to keep the camera rolling as Ricky swayed off down West 4th, radio in hand, funky organ floating lightly on the breeze. I don’t know if he could tell we were still filming him, or if he just rolls through life like that all the time. It can be hard to tell where the real Ricky stops and the Lazy Hustler begins. But then again, I’m not so sure it matters.

Earlier this year we met up with our old friend Ricky Powell at Eva's Deli in Greenwich Village. Born and raised in the Village, Ricky cut his teeth shooting photos of his schoolmates, the Beastie Boys, and stars of the art world who called the Village home like Warhol, Basquiat and Keith Haring. After picking up his signature burrito (The Lazy Hustler) at Eva's we went on a "walk and talk" with Ricky through Greenwich Village, finding old haunts, old friends and a little slice of the Lazy Hustler's neighborhood. RICKY POWELL - https://www.rickypowell.com

April 27, 2020 /Bryce Richardson
Travel, Stories
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“If you were to ask me to define a photograph in a few words, I would say it is a fossil of light and time.” - Daido Moriyama

“If you were to ask me to define a photograph in a few words, I would say it is a fossil of light and time.” - Daido Moriyama

A Fossil of Light and Time: Daido Moriyama

October 10, 2019 by Bryce Richardson in Stories

A pioneer of evocative, artistic photography in postwar Japan, Moriyama was closely associated with the art/photography magazine Provoke which was a milestone for avant garde and street photography. Moriyama and Provoke helped to shape the “are-bure-boke” style – translated to “grainy/rough, blurry, out-of-focus” which pushed the boundaries of capturing the moment with a camera.

It strikes me that it’s hard to fathom a time when photography was not considered art. In today’s world of instant camera gratification, ‘grammable sunset shots and photographers launching their careers through a hashtag, it can be hard to remember that for almost the entirety of the camera’s existence it was thought of as a journalistic tool and not a medium for artistic expression. While there were a few photographers who pushed the notion of photography as art in the first half of the 20th century like one of my personal favorites, the immortal Alfred Stieglitz, photography as art didn’t really come into its own as an art form until the 1960s.

A relatively new medium, artists shied away from embracing the possibilities of the photograph as art for many reasons: it was expensive, it wasn’t established in the canon of “acceptable” art, it was too “easy” to just point and shoot. Photographers like Daido Moriyama, however, saw the possibility of the immediacy of photography. Moriyama and his compatriots at Provoke challenged the status quo of a Japan that was still reeling from the loss of World War II and the psychologically shattering effects of the atomic bombs dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima. What Moriyama and the Provoke crew were attempting to do was to hold up a mirror to the grit and grime of the underside of Japanese society that was hoping to just put on a brave face and move past the events of the middle part of the 1940s.

Photography’s ability to anchor events in time gave Moriyama the key he needed to capture not just the idea of an instant, but the feeling of experiencing hundreds of thousands of small instants that makes up a life:

Cars are Things - 1971

Cars are Things - 1971

“My photos are often out of focus, rough, streaky, warped, etc. But if you think about it, a normal human being will in one day perceive an infinite number of images, and some of them are focused upon, others are barely seen out of the corner of one’s eye.”

Daido Moriyama was born October 9, in 1938.

1969

1969


Kariudo (Hunter) 1973

Kariudo (Hunter) 1973


Mirage - 1970s

Mirage - 1970s


2016

2016


Self Portrait

Self Portrait


October 10, 2019 /Bryce Richardson
photography, street photography, daido moriyama
Stories
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