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![]() Portrait of a Man Behind the lens of Marc Hauser
Back when Marc Hauser took a photo of a young John Mellencamp with his
arm around his grandfather, critics claimed that this was the piece that
Hauser would become known for, but he reasons that it just got him a few
more jobs. Tonight at his Oculus Gallery opening, everyone gets to see
not only that famous photo, but a renewed glimpse into more than thirty
years of Hauser's photography.
Hauser, who began his photography career at 14, had a rough last
year after sustaining an injury rendering him almost incapable of
working. All Terrain, a Chicago-based marketing agency, got one of its
first jobs from Hauser ten years ago, so this December, "it was time
for us to get to pay him back," Brook Jay, All Terrain's chief
marketing officer, says of her firm's contribution to the show. After
curator and organizer Neda Dollah went through a couple thousand pieces
with Hauser,
a
select ninety made the cut, all for sale at the gallery. And while
hundreds of people show up to see some of his most famous and some
previously unseen pieces, many understandably want to meet the man
behind the photos.
"My uncle worked for the Playboy Theater and I wanted to do some
work...then one day Stan [Malinowski] saw my work and asked me to come
to California," Hauser explains about his beginnings. From then on, he
made a name for himself working with celebrities, ad agencies and
fashion photography. But a career didn't just fall into his lap. "You
have to let people know you are around...when you're traveling you
have
to let them know you're there," Hauser advises. But sometimes they
found him, like when he was asked to shoot the private Woody Allen--an
invite that only makes him shrug his shoulders.
The photos themselves are gorgeous, but it's the stories behind them
that add a little something special. "This man worked on the song
`Route 66'...when I took the photo he was living on a grocery-store
floor...it was hard times and his clothes were a mess so he's wearing
my
coat," Hauser says as he casually taps the same coat he is wearing.
But
ask him about his favorite photo and there isn't a second of
hesitation.
"Dolly Parton, she's the nicest person, funny and wild. I took a
picture with her and accidentally bumped her chest and while I
apologized she just said, `Don't worry, I'm used to it.'"
For Hauser, it has always been about the people. "I love people so
I shoot people," he says. And while he does direct his subjects while
shooting them, deciding how he wants to see things, "it's great to
catch them in the moment...telling their stories." As the crowd comes
and goes, thanking Hauser, everyone is pleased to hear that this isn't
the end. "I'm back to classic portraits, they're what I love," he
modestly smiles.
Also by Molly Sullivan Choose Chomsky
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