Julius Shulman at work in 1960.
Image © Julius Shulman & Juergen Nogai
Last week I was speaking with a friend, another photographer, and he asked me, "What's your plan" "Plan?" I replied. "Yeah, plan," he said. "You know, what about when you're sixty-five? These cameras are heavy, clients want long days. You always carry two, right?" That is right, I always have two - a combination of always having a backup with me and often shooting with two at a time. It's a model I follow whether I am with assistants or on my own. Two pro bodies, three to five lenses. The last time I weighed my basic camera bag I think it was at least thirty-five pounds.
Well, I've got twenty years yet to figure out what I'll do at sixty-five but lest I jump to conclusions in comes the story of Julius Shulman, architectural photographer. Julius is ninety-eight and even if you have never heard of him you know his work. It's embedded in the culture and it still exerts a strong influence in the collective vision of Los Angeles and in fictional worlds such as Tony Stark's house in the movie, Iron Man.
In case you are wondering what to do at ninety-eight, you can photograph houses at $6k a pop.