Basketball in Baltimore

This is one of the earliest photographs I made on the streets.

In 2016, I was photographing around the West Baltimore neighborhood — Sandtown, Winchester — very frequently with my Ricoh GR2. I’d tuck it in my pocket, walk around… this was just the kind of scene available to me in my backyard while attending university.

I spotted the mural. I noticed the beautiful light — it was golden hour, the sun setting. I saw the shadows and the light cast on the mural and I had to approach.

One of the first things I did:

  • I approached the people.
  • Asked for permission.
  • Told them I’m a student.
  • They were eager and open to letting me photograph them.

Pro Tip:

Breaking the ice, getting permission, and getting closer physically and emotionally leads to more impactful photographs.

In the frame:

  • Foreground: A man gazing downward at his hand.
  • Background: Another man looking up at the basketball on his fingertips, with light casting on his face.
  • Right side: Two men looking back towards me.

There’s a spiral composition here — a windmill effect. It’s strange, mysterious, visually impactful.

Other details:

  • Shadows of basketball players, including my own shadow.
  • The interaction of the shadow basketball with the mural basketball.
  • Gesture of the boy with an outstretched hand on his forehead.
  • Smokestack from the mural interacting visually with a hand gesture.

Always follow your intuition.

I saw a beautiful background, I approached openly, and through honesty and curiosity, I came home with complexity.

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