Los Angeles Times

Touch of old school

- By Michael Miller michael.miller@latimes.com

The contraptio­n that Joel Brown lugs onto San Onofre State Beach is heavy— about 20 pounds, he guesses— and made more unwieldy by the challenge of keeping the camera balanced on spindly tripod legs.

Once the artist has his subject in place, it may be a solid minute before he can actually take the picture. First, Brown drapes a dark cloth over his head and the camera and focuses the shot with metal knobs, after which he slides in the film. With the camera loaded, he stands to the side and pushes a button at the end of a cable. Then, it’s back to the dark roomat home, where the 8- by- 10- inch black- and- white portrait emerges on a silver gelatin print.

Brown, a Rancho Santa Margarita resident, favors aesthetic quality over convenienc­e. And this fall, all that time has paid off— at a place where, ironically, rushing is often the order of the day.

Twenty of Brown’s seaside portraits grace Terminals A, Band Cat John Wayne Airport in Santa Ana through Oct. 15. The photograph­er, who bought a 1950s- vintage Deardorff camera and other equipment on eBay, has spent years working on his San Onofre series.

“Pose” is the keyword here, because the untitled series doesn’t feature any candid action shots. Many of Brown’s subjects hold their surfboards as they stand by the ocean, while other beachgoers pose in street clothes or next to their cars. In all cases, the flinty detail of the portraits gives them the look of an era when a photograph required more money and time than in the iPhone age.

“You probably gavemea different look just because you’re in front of that camera, and you knowthat I’m investing time in photograph­ing you,” Brown said. “You’re investing your time to give right back to me, so, between the two of us, we’re going to comeup with something that’s probably going to look a little differentl­y than if Iwas just shooting a motor- drive digital in front of your face.”

The Deardorff model Brown purchased may look like a relic, but in fact the Tennessee company still manufactur­es it. General manager Barry Cochran said L. F. Deardorff& Sons assembles 25 to 30 of the old- fashioned models a year and restores ones, like Brown’s, that have weathered the decades.

 ?? Joel Brown ?? “SCHOOL HOLIDAY” is among the photograph­s by Joel Brown on display at the JohnWayne Airport through Oct. 15.
Joel Brown “SCHOOL HOLIDAY” is among the photograph­s by Joel Brown on display at the JohnWayne Airport through Oct. 15.
 ?? Joel Brown ?? “HOTROD” has a vintage look that perfectlym­atches Brown’s vintage camera.
Joel Brown “HOTROD” has a vintage look that perfectlym­atches Brown’s vintage camera.
 ?? Joel Brown ?? “SANO MORNING” serves as a good reminder that some things never change,
Joel Brown “SANO MORNING” serves as a good reminder that some things never change,
 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? PHOTOGRAPH­ER Joel Brown and his 1950s- era Deardorff camera.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times PHOTOGRAPH­ER Joel Brown and his 1950s- era Deardorff camera.

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