covid19

Christmas In Paris by Bradley Hanson

Based solely on the limited evidence of the last 3 years, we are in the new habit of traveling internationally every other holiday season. We were last in Rome and Naples, Italy at the end of December in 2019, weeks before it became THE Covid-19 hotspot in the world.

This winter, we were in Paris for 4 days, (with one day visiting the surreal Mont Saint-Michel in Normandy, France) from Christmas Eve until the morning of the 29th. Mont Saint-Michel was a 4.5 hour bus ride from Paris, but is definitely worth the trip. I first learned of it from the 1990 movie “Mindwalk,” starring John Heard and Sam Waterson. The day after we left, Paris reinstated an outdoor mask mandate as Omicron rages across the world. France requires all visitors to be fully vaccinated get a vaccine pass to visit museums and restaurants, and the US requires proof of a negative Covid-19 test 24 hours before arriving in the US. We passed the Covid-19 tests in Paris required for our return to the Minneapolis airport, which was reassuring.

We were traveling with our 8 year old autistic genius son, Oliver, which both changed the activities we did while altering our timeline. It also required us to be extremely flexible with our choices, as well as the duration in any of our desired destinations. He is a very creative kid who will only eat about 4 things in the world, and none of them were convenient in Paris (except cold milk), so he lost a lot of weight on our long days of walking.

Oliver also is a creature of deep obsessions. We never know what is coming next, but we know from experience it will be both interesting and deeply pursued, as well as vehemently enjoyed. On this trip, Oliver became enamored with pigeons, which are in great supply. He feed them, loved having them gather and fly around him, and, at one point, tried to get one to jump onto his arm. Oliver also began sketching in earnest. We got him a few sketchbooks and he started a book of his drawings, appropriately named “Book Of Pigeons,” which helped the reader through the process of drawing pigeons, part by part, beginning with the feet. (Video below paragraph text)

We hope Oliver will always remember this trip, particularly because it allowed him to finally get some closure on another lifetime obsession of his: the Mona Lisa. This painting is hanging in the Louvre Museum, and is obviously a huge part of the draw to many of it’s visitors based on the line required to see it. Pro-tip: Musee D’Orsay (Orsay Museum) nearby is a much better museum if you are interested in more modern art and has a wonderful collection of the French impressionists.

It is easy to feel overwhelmed in Paris, particularly if you are claustrophobic and crowd-averse. It’s a large city with a cafe on literally every corner, and it’s like watching a sunset where you keep thinking it can’t get any better and then it keeps happening. It takes a while to get your bearings because there are no tall buildings, though the Eiffel Tower is often visible depending on where you are. Montmartre is probably the densest and the most interesting neighborhood, directly at the top of a deceptively steep hill beneath the obligatory Sacre-Cour cathedral. Loaded with shops and restaurants, it’s also loaded with people. (See link to video below).

Hard-wired to always have a camera with me, I remembered to be a parent first and a photographer second. I brought one camera and one lens, a 35mm. I watched a lot of amazing moments appear and evaporate right in front of my eyes. I saw a man walking that was a dead ringer for what I imagine Jean-Paul Sarte might have looked like at age 30. My hands were usually full of other things I had to carry, including baguette sandwiches, cappuccino, and an umbrella from the ubiquitous daily rain. I wanted to be as present as possible, occasionally catching myself taking photographs more for my memory enhancement than pushing myself creatively, the latter being my usual motivation, as well as using my phone to record videos of our son Oliver being Oliver.

For those who haven’t had the experience, Paris is still the most beautiful city I’ve been to, bustling and full of vibrant people who’s formality is occasionally mistaken for rudeness to the untrained eye. Even with my minimal French vocabulary, we found everyone to be extremely helpful and friendly. My rudimentary French was not an issue in any way until the very last morning, when our plane ticket didn’t specify which of the three terminals was required for our flight home. The Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris is enormous, so I’ve learned a good pro tip is knowing exactly where to be dropped off to shorten the distance you have to run to the gate…

The last thing I learned in 2021: If you can actually taste the food on the airplane, you definitely don’t have Covid-19!

Paris videos from my iPhone:

Accordion player in Montmartre

Mimes near the Eiffel Tower

Walking Marche Du Montorgueil

Oliver and the pigeons

People milling around at the top of Montmartre

Fellini moment from a vendor market on Christmas Day

Here are some highlights to give you a feel of this legendary city. Clicking any image will pull it up at a larger size, which will also allow you to scroll through all of the images with the < and > buttons.

I was just interviewed in World's Best Wedding Photos about how I got started in Seattle shooting weddings on film, how I work, and why I never ended up delivering pizzas. They also selected some of their favorite photographs of mine. If you’d like to read the entire interview and see the accompanying gallery, click here.

https://www.worldsbestweddingphotos.com/artist-interview-bradley-hanson

If you want to follow me on Instagram, I have two accounts: @bradleyhanson is my personal one, all square images from my iPhone since 2008. @bradleyhansonphotography is my professional portfolio, a mix of weddings, family and portraits, as well as black and white and color landscape images. If you are still reading this far, you’ve already figured out how to find my website…

I am a Minneapolis/Saint Paul, Minnesota based wedding photographer, specializing in documentary style weddings and Indian/Hindu weddings all over the world. To see more of my wedding work, click the wedding galleries under the portfolio heading. To inquire about my rates and availability, call me at 206-393-8292, email me at bradley@bradleyhanson.com or fill out the contact form (click the “contact” link on the top right above this paragraph).

2020: Shelter In Place by Bradley Hanson

Our son Oliver, the human cat, is always finding fun uses for giant boxes in our living room while we pack for our move to St. Paul, MN

A family fishing at Lake Hiawatha in Minneapolis the night before the “stay at home” orders from the governor

Well, 2020 started with such promise.

We had just finished a wonderful trip to Amsterdam, Rome and Naples, Italy, 3 weeks before a massive change was underway.

Things were off to a great start, and by the end of the month, it was clear that Covid-19, the latest coronavirus, was going to upend our lives for the next few months. The year was filling out nicely and then even more dramatically than late 2008: near total radio silence as people stopped making plans and changed the ones they had.

I work all year round, but the majority of my work is in the months of June through October. The rest of the year I am booking weddings, editing existing weddings, meeting with clients, designing wedding albums and photographing family portraits, landscapes, our family adventures and road trips, and anything that catches my eye.

The current day to day is staying indoors with our 6 year old son, working on his distance online learning program until we figure out if and when his school will resume or even at the start of the next grade in September. I’m also working with existing clients to reschedule their weddings. I was supposed to be photographing a destination wedding in Jamaica in late March, then another in Washington State in early May. Both of them have been rescheduled. I’m rescheduling with all of my clients, particularly for June and July 2020 weddings, to find dates that work for them later in the year or moving them to open dates in 2021.

As always, I have my camera with me at all times and although I rarely leave the house now aside from bicycle rides for exercise and walks with my family for my sanity. I hope you and your families are staying indoors as much as possible, away from others and getting re-acquainted with the joys of organizing, cleaning, and finally unable to say “I wish I had the time to do (insert task here).” We are lucky to have some talented, artistic friends make masks for our whole family. When I go to the grocery store or food co-op, it’s clear that it’s another means of self-expression. Part of our new wardrobe!

Watching a little too much TV (Ozark 3, Fargo, Breeders, Catch 22, Lady Dynamite, etc), but also finally crossing off some great books from my reading list and organizing the house.

I’ve been self-employed for 21 years. I’m used to being home. Most people aren’t. Still, I am starting to have a harder time figuring out what day it is…

We all owe a debt of gratitude to the people all around us who are making life better: those pulling long shifts in hospitals and putting their own health at risk to help others. The restaurant workers and cooks still there making our food, the delivery people bringing it to our houses. The hard working people working in grocery stores and pharmacies, stocking the shelves, and everyone else still showing up to work.

As I write this, the US still doesn’t have easily accessible testing like Germany and South Korea, part of why we have triple the number of cases of anyone else in the world: 500,000, as well as surpassing Italy for the most fatalities. We need to be as cautious as possible. I hope people take physical distancing seriously and we can get past this. Be safe, look out for each other, help a friend or neighbor if you can, and look for the silver lining. Support your favorite restaurants with take-out orders to help keep them afloat. A lot of businesses, including restaurants will suffer.

In the middle of all this, we are packing to move at the end of April. As the old saying goes, “May you live in interesting times.” We will never forget 2020, that’s for sure.

If you want to follow me on Instagram, I have two accounts: @bradleyhanson is my personal one, all square images from my iPhone since 2008. @bradleyhansonphotography is my professional portfolio, a mix of weddings, family and portraits, as well as black and white and color landscape images. If you are still reading this far, you’ve already figured out how to find my website…

I am a Minneapolis, Minnesota based wedding photographer, specializing in documentary style weddings and Indian/Hindu weddings all over the world. To see more of my wedding work, click the wedding galleries under the portfolio heading. To inquire about my rates and availability, call me at 206-393-8292, email me at bradley@bradleyhanson.com or fill out the contact form (click the “contact” link on the top right above this paragraph).

Our son Oliver on a walk outside at the Lake Hiawatha Golf Club in South Minneapolis