| Press Cutting |
Press cutting: Published in Modern Photography 1989.
A British photographer hunts the
rich on the wing
by Judith Newman
If you want to know what God thinks of money, Dorothy Parker once
said,just look at the people he gave it to.
Few have looked as piercingly as the British society photographer Dafydd Jones.
Every night Jones; camera testifies to the drama and, well, the silliness of
the British social arena, where the upper echelons do what they do best - keep
the rest of the world at bay.
Jones does not strive for postcard perfect poses of the gentry at play-those
graceful shots of princess Diana with her brood tow-headed heirs. Such mythologizing
is for Ralph Lauren ads and Lord Lichfield, the Queens cousin and unofficial
court phographer. No, this grandson of a Welsh coal miner snaps the aristos
with thier pants figuratively, and sometimes literally, down. And, cricky, they
love it.
The English have a sense of humor about themselves says
Jones, whose caught-on -the-wingwork appears regularly in the social arbiters
Tatler and Harpers & Queen and has been copiedby such American magazines
as Vanity fair, W and Spy. They see these pictures as caricatures
that capture something about them. Indeed, Jones work is more in
line with the satiric illustrations of William Hogarth and spy, than the society
photographs of Cocil Beaton and Bill Brandt.
What Jones often captures is that rare moment of utter unself-consciousness
in people trained never to let thier guard down. It is often not a pretty sight,
but he says, Ive never had anyone tell me they were offended by
my work. In fact, some of the people whove had the most unflattering photos
published then ask me to do their daughters weddings.
Jones speaks haltingly, his voice barely above a whisper. Dressed for lunch
in khakis and chamois shirt, he looks like a graduate student younger than his
30 years. We chat in a toney French restaurant - Too toney perhaps for even
a successful freelancer, who has the support of a wife and two children, to
have chosen.
At Jones insistence his friend David Kirke, a writer and self-proclaimed
adventurer joins in. Kirke is the founder of the Dangerous Sports Club, a group
of Oxford and Cambridge bloods who invent thier own sports.
We catapault ourselves off cranes, jump off bridges attached to
bungies (elastic straps), that sort of thing.
Its soon clear why Kirke is along, Jones hates to explain his work, something
the voluble daredevil is the only to happy to do for him.
Lady Melchett called Dafydd The Invisible Man,
says Kirke. He just blends in with the scenery.
I just try to wear whatever everyone else is wearing,
adds Jones. And Im not loaded down with equipment, so im not
too intrusive.
Less interested in gadgetry than in the final print, Jones generally works with
one auto camera, an olympus 35 RC. Occasionally hell use a leica M4, which
is useful because you can change the lenses, which you cant do with the
Olympus. He has used the most basic point-and-shoots (including a Kodak
Instamatic), but thinks theyre generally too slow for this kind of work.
Jones shoots five or six rolls of Tri-X a night- and claims to take only one
or two pictures a month that have any artistic merit. Hes used the Kodak
film since he started photography eight years ago. I tried T-max, but
i just didnt like it. And besides, Tri-X is cheaper. Jones developes
his own negatives in Ilford ID 11, a solution he switched to after Kodak
changed the mix-up formula D76, Jones rates his Tri-X at 400 when using
a flash and at 1250 for indoor available-light shots. i quite like Tri-X
because you can up-rate (push it). When he up-rates
film Jones switches to Acufine developer.
For flash work Jones uses the compact Starblitz 2001, which he holds off camera,
bouncing light off the ceiling.
I dont think its particularly important what kind of equipment
you use,he says. There are cheap Russian cameras that are as good
for my purposes. When submitting work to a magazine, Jones will edit his
contact sheets and send in only those shots he considers worthwhile. An assistant
prints the pictures for him.
One of Jones most successful projects is a series of photographs of people
asleep at parties. I most enjoy taking pictures of people when they are
completly unaware. Dawn is the Invisible Mans favorite time
to shoot his subjects. they are usually too spaced out to care that you
are photographing them.
The allure of Jones work goes beyond the aristocratic faces that appear
in his pictures, but its appeal is still hard to define. Of course Kirke,
whose admiration for Jones grows visibly in inverse proportion to the level
of a second bottle of Bordeaux, wants very badly to try. England is a
place of mirrors, where everyone is trying to catch thier reflection in someone
else. Dafydds work is about this process-about people watching other people
watching them. Jones, exercising his third Armagnac, knocksthe discourse
down a couple of pegs. I just snap it when it looks right, he sighs.
Jones comes by his modesty honestly. He trained in fine arts at the fine arts
at the Winchester School of Art, painting huge abstract oils. At 22, with paintings
not exactly zipping out of his studio, he took a job as a strolling photographer
at a holiday camp. (Holiday camps are peculiarly British institution. The nearest
American equivilant would be a cross between Catskills resort and Camp
Pendleton) It was while photographing contests for Mr Tarzans, Gorgeous Grandmas
and lovely legs that Jones developed an abiding distaste for colour photography.
People only want to look at the pretty colours. Its distracting,
and usually takes away from the subject.
After six months he moved to Oxford, where he begun photographing the rather
festive goings-on at the University dining clubs. Theres an exuberance,
lightly seasoned with desperation, in these early photos that would have done
Scott Fitzcrald proud.
His Oxford pictures won second prize in a Times of London contest (first prize
went to a man who now sells insurance, Jones says)and national attention. Hes
not looked back.
Jones hopes he will not always be known as a society photographer. It seems
strange to him that he, a quiet family man who never goes to parties on his
own, has made his name chronicling the social steeplechase.
The check comes for lunch. the dare-devil Kirke does not hazard reaching for
it. Jones picks it up and floats it casually in my direction. it totals nearly
100 newly resurgent pounds sterling. Im sure your magazine can take
care of it, he says smiling sweetly, dreamily. I am utterly disarmed.
Of course, I pay.
The Invisible Man has struck again.