John Dominis was born June 27, 1921 Los
Angeles, attending the University of Southern California. After graduating he
became a freelance photographer, during the 1950’s he became a photojournalist
for Life Magazine and covered the Korean and Vietnam War. J ohn Dominis is a photographer who has seen
it all, he has witnessed historical events such as John F Kennedy giving a
speech at the berlin wall, to then hanging out with movies stars like Steve
McQueen and frank Sinatra, he spent three months trailing Sinatra to witness him
in his natural element, among swank drunk stars. Dominis captured the most
intimate pictures of his subject, which is endearing to see. Looking at his
work, one can see that all the emotions of the subjects are natural and are not
staged. Dominis has photographed everything to big cats, big stars and big dinners. Dominis has captured the most iconic moments of our time. Majority of people have probably seen his work but are unaware of the man behind the lens, which is more the reason to look at his work.
This is one of the most iconic moments in sport history. Tommie Smith and John Carlos gave a Black Power Salute, 16 October 1968. This was in the amidst of the American Civil Movement. As the national anthem began to play both men raised one gloved hand, and shaped it into a fist, the fist represented the unity of their movement. Because of their defiant act, they were stripped of there olympic medals and furthermore ostracised from the sport and political community. "If I win, I am American, not a black American. But if I did something bad, then they would say I am a Negro. We are black and we are proud of being black. Black America will understand what we did tonight."
This is one of the most iconic moments in sport history. Tommie Smith and John Carlos gave a Black Power Salute, 16 October 1968. This was in the amidst of the American Civil Movement. As the national anthem began to play both men raised one gloved hand, and shaped it into a fist, the fist represented the unity of their movement. Because of their defiant act, they were stripped of there olympic medals and furthermore ostracised from the sport and political community. "If I win, I am American, not a black American. But if I did something bad, then they would say I am a Negro. We are black and we are proud of being black. Black America will understand what we did tonight."
Dominis hanging around with Steve Mcqueen and his wife Neile,Hollywood,1963. “That’s my technique with people. I’m sort of a fly on the wall. You try not to interfere, hang around, hope that they don’t even notice you, and if they do, they don’t care.” When photographing people Dominis stalks them, he will sit and wait for the right shot, which probably helped him when photographing big cats. Patiences really is a virtue, which Dominis has honed as a skill.
References: John, Loengard, Gordon Parks, Life Magazine . "The Great Life Photographers" (Published: Thames and Hudson 30/11/2009) ( pp106)
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