The Hamilton Spectator

The joy of the unexpected photograph

Franca Marazia says she can just “feel” when the right scene presents itself

- REGINA HAGGO

“I love photograph­y,” says Franca Marazia. “It is my great escape.”

She focuses on the world she knows best.

“I photograph everyday objects, daily life activities, the environmen­t that surrounds us, and the people and pets I meet along the way,” she tells me.

Marazia, 59, who lives in Hamilton, taught elementary school for 30 years. She says she is self-taught when it comes to photograph­y, but she has had many years in which to sharpen her skills.

“I have always been photograph­ing something, usually at family functions,” she says. “I seem to be the keeper of memories. I used photograph­y in my classroom as well.”

Camera in hand, she usually sets out with a destinatio­n and a plan. But she welcomes the photograph that presents itself when she is not expecting it.

“Knowing the right scene is hard to explain,” she says. “It’s something I feel.”

Marazia is a regular contributo­r to Art in the Workplace at McMaster Innovation Park, located at 175 Longwood Rd. S. One of her offerings in the current show is “Sunset Boulevard,” taken at Pier 8 in the West Harbour.

She found a scene with a variety of shapes and textures, some of them unexpected.

Three figures sit at a table silhouette­d in front of a landscape lying beyond a fence. The regular verticals of the fence contrast with the humans’ irregular shapes. A sparkling body of water leads to a horizontal strip of wooded land in the distance. This darkened land mass complement­s the dark human shapes in the foreground.

The sky, which fills the upper two-thirds of the compositio­n, contribute­s a different combinatio­n of colours and textures, including an emphatic circle of sun.

“I had been photograph­ing activity on the water and on the pathways,” she recalls. “Just happened to stay long enough to capture a breathtaki­ng summer sunset. In trying to shoot its reflection on the water, one of my images included a family sitting at a picnic table. I didn’t realize what I had until I uploaded the images onto my computer.”

Marazia is never without her camera when she travels. In Viseu, Portugal, she was sitting at an outdoor café when she saw a man feeding pigeons, a familiar sight that inspired a sepia photograph.

A spacious foreground leads to six pigeons, each one attentivel­y facing the man seated on a bench. He’s leaning toward them, looking at the food in his hand. He is as attentive as they are. Cars are lined up behind him, a background of modern urban clutter that contrasts with the timelessne­ss and spaciousne­ss of the event in the foreground.

In Amsterdam, Marazia found bicycles.

“It was bicycle heaven for me,” she says. “I captured hundreds of them. Such variety in design and functional­ity.”

In “Sunshine Yellow” she comes up close to bicycles wet with rain. In cropping the scene, Marazia draws our attention to the many circles and lines that crowd and overlap one another.

Red paving bricks and green moss add more geometric shapes and bright hues.

“I have a large collection of bicycle images. I’ve thought about why I feel the need to capture these images,” she explains. “On the one hand, I am reminded of earlier days, my teen years, when I practicall­y lived on my bright blue 10-speed. It was my method of transporta­tion for getting to my part-time job and for meeting up with friends. On the other hand, I am drawn in by the colour and design — the wheels of freedom.”

Regina Haggo, art historian, public speaker, curator and former professor at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand, teaches at the Dundas Valley School of Art. dhaggo@the spec.com

 ??  ?? Franca Marazia, Sunset Boulevard (West Harbour, Hamilton), colour photograph, $125, Art in the Workplace until Feb. 28, McMaster Innovation Park.
Franca Marazia, Sunset Boulevard (West Harbour, Hamilton), colour photograph, $125, Art in the Workplace until Feb. 28, McMaster Innovation Park.
 ??  ?? Franca Marazia, Sunday in the Park, sepia photograph, $125.
Franca Marazia, Sunday in the Park, sepia photograph, $125.
 ??  ?? Franca Marazia, Sunshine Yellow, colour photograph, $125.
Franca Marazia, Sunshine Yellow, colour photograph, $125.
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