May 25 2010

Opening Our Eyes: They’re Off!

Category: Multimedia & Video, Photographers, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 2:33 pm

AfterCapture Blog_100525_Open Our Eyes_1Today, May 25, 2010, marks the bicentenary of the revolution that marked the beginning of Argentina’s road to independence. It seems appropriate that Chance decided that today would also be the day that Gail Mooney would set off on her 3-month, round-the-world trip to create “Opening Our Eyes”, a documentary film project she is making in partnership with her daughter, Erin Kelly.

I say that the connection to Argentina’s revolution (and ultimate independence) is appropriate because of all the photographers I know personally, without a doubt, Gail Mooney is the most revolutionary- and independent-minded.

Since I introduced “Opening Our Eyes” in March, the project has taken much fuller shape. You can get a good sense of the trip at the main website. Keep in mind that a year ago Mooney hadn’t even thought up this trip. From initial concept to flying out of Newark airport today, Mooney and Kelly have orchestrated all details of this massive undertaking in only a little over six months.

AfterCapture Blog_100525_Open Our Eyes_2Be sure to also check out “Journeys of a Hybrid”, Mooney’s excellent blog full of insights — from the personal and creative to the technical and business side — from a photographer who has lived her life to the fullest, and who seems to be just warming up.

Mooney, who has been in the business for 33 years, has focused primarily on still photographic coverage of travel assignments for magazines. However, she has also worked plenty in the commercial realm in partnership with her husband, Tom Kelly.

Mooney not only made a smooth transition to digital photography, but she is one of the new bread photographers who is fully embracing the possibilities of video and, just as fully, the exciting possibilities of Web publication and social media.

Good Lu. . .

Besides alerting you to Mooney’s departure (”hybrid” still/motion image-making storytellers are sure to find inspiration from her project), the driving force behind writing this post was to publicly say “Good luck, Gail!” However, wishing Mooney good luck seems a bit odd.

In forging the life that she has wanted to live, Mooney has never seemed to rely on luck. “I do really on serendipity,” she to told me yesterday, when I touched base with her by phone. Mooney has talked to me many times about serendipity, especially in regard to how she allows this force to help the stories she is covering to unfold organically, and in different directions then she might originally imagine.

Mooney’s comfort with serendipity will no doubt be a key to her success on this storytelling trip of a lifetime. As she reports in her “Departure Day” post: “Ultimately, we will be interviewing and filming 10 different people on 5 continents.”

What’s fascinating is how Mooney and Kelly will evolve the story as it unfolds, connecting each new subject to the previous in a way that reveals itself in a manner that no script can predict.

The Blessed Web

There are a number of reasons this trip is unique for Mooney — from traveling with her daughter and recording in still and video with a dSLR to covering so many individual stories on such a huge geographical scope. However, I cannot ignore that at the heart of the nature of this trip lies the new possibilities in media, a.k.a., Web 2.0 and Social Media.

Mooney free to create and publish at will. She has told me that it is the ability to publish video to global audience at basically no cost is what makes the possibilities in video truly exciting. It is not, according to Mooney and as many photographers seem to think, that dSLRs can capture HD video. Mooney has been capturing motion for years — first with 16- and 35mm, then with digital — but with each passing day she sees more distribution opportunities.

These opportunities allow Mooney to fly off today sure that she will be able to win an audience for the move she creates with her daughter, although she is not limited in worry exactly what this audience will be.

Beyond distribution, it is important to realize that the very evolution of Mooney’s thinking about and planning for this trip has taken form via the social media efforts that she has been engaged in. Although even just yesterday she mentioned missing the quality of hand-written, post-delivered letters, she clearly has been able to harness the power of developing technologies without losing site of what has always interested her most: connecting on the one-to-one level, learning about people and places and sharing what she has learned with her storytelling.

Lucky Us: A Great Writer

AfterCapture Blog_100525_Open Our Eyes_3Yesterday, Mooney told me that almost everyone she has told about her journey expresses a “I-wish-I-could-do-that!” kind of jealousy. Well, I’m not jealous of Mooney’s journey, but I must confess to being just a bit jealous of her writing abilities.

More than once Mooney has commented on the fact that she is not a writer, and wished she had greater skills in this area. Well, she really doesn’t need them. She is a damn good writer, and she is one of the few people I know who can quickly communicate in writing as naturally and fluidly as she does in speech. And this is the key to what makes her blogs and her writing (about her life, her subjects and the craft and business of photography) so engaging.

Mooney has already proved herself a savvy, enticing blogger with her “Journeys of a Hybrid”, which no doubt helped get her in shape for “Opening Our Eyes.” Now that she is in great writing shape — and somewhere over the Atlantic en route to her first stop in Entebbe, Uganda — it’s nice to know that, with her characteristic drive to share the rich life she is living, Mooney will be keeping us updated on her adventures at “Opening Our Eyes.”

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2 Responses to “Opening Our Eyes: They’re Off!”

  1. Ethan G. Salwen says:

    Thanks, Tom!

    Yes “#1 fan” and “ultimate observer and beneficiary” seem right on. But let’s not forget: An incredible partner in Life and Creative Pursuits for always supporting Gail when she runs over to cover the world. . .and now with you’re daughter.

    I mentioned that many are jealous of Gail’s trip. I’m sure there are many spouses who would be incredibly jealous of such amazing support.

    Good luck on YOUR projects while holding down the fort!

    -Ethan

  2. Tom Kelly says:

    Ethan – You have described Gail and her passions perfectly.

    I have been her #1 fan since 1973, I am the ultimate observer and beneficiary of her talents and passions. We have shared a richly rewarding life together and this new project that Gail and our daughter Erin have launched, moves the bar way up. She has always been and remains not just a dreamer, but a “do-er”… Gail has most always done what she says she will do. A quality remiss in most humans I’ve known.

    Thanks for being a fan, too.

    I encourage everyone to follow their journey, which has just begun and consider supporting the project if you are able. http://www.openingoureyes.net

    All the best – Tom Kelly

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