Glass Ceiling
New Series / Work in progress: I´m currently looking for participants, feel free to get in touch.
A glass ceiling is a metaphor used to represent an invisible barrier that prevents a given demographic (typically applied to women) from rising beyond a certain level in a hierarchy. – Wikipedia
An unacknowledged barrier to advancement in a profession, especially affecting women and members of minorities. – Oxford Languages
The term „glass ceiling“ refers to the sometimes-invisible barrier to success that many women come up against in their careers. – BBC
Self Portrait at a Yoga Aktuell Shoot
This is a quick snapshot kind of self-portrait at a Yoga Aktuell photoshoot back in September 2019.
Chiemsee, Germany
Critical Mass: 20 Thousand
It was 20,000 cyclists demonstrating in Budapest, occupying the streets on the car-free day. Double the number compared to the previous spring event.
The gathering started late, so I had to work a bit more in advance. I, therefore, asked the main organiser, Kükü (pictured) to pose for me just before they went on to peacefully regain Budapest. He shouted: Critical Mass!
Upon arrival at the publisher´s office, I loved the layout the editors chose.
In general, Magyar Hírlap was home to many creative minds, and I could always be sure that they would come up with the best choice of the material I could offer. This time was no different.
I was enthusiastic and stayed until the first copies arrived, took a few and brought the paper of tomorrow to the Critical Mass afterparty.
It was 2005, still before smartphones´ instant-news times. Many shouted joyfully to find out that we indeed cracked the 20,000 that year!
Critical Mass Budapest has been said to be the biggest in the world, with the spring 2008 figure reported at 80,000.
Accreditation? No, just do it.
16. August 2005, Downtown Budapest
11:45 AM – End of the 1st meeting to start the paper.
Incoming call right after from my editor:
– Some plane came down in Athens, we will write about that, but it may well become the day´s topic as the aviation industry in general. So we need 2nd and 3rd, but if good the front page as well.
– Do you have accreditation to the airport?
– No we don´t, they won´t give it that fast. Just do something. The pages close at 6 PM.
This is how these 2 images featured as pairs on the earlier version of my home page. I enjoy the power of photographs enhancing a particular reading of one another. Its a direct way a photographer can invite the viewer towards a set of ideas.
2005, Budapest Airport, Hungary
2005, Paulahof, Austria
This Job Changed my Career
It was an assignment the very day I got fired. I was told by the newly appointed picture editor that he had nothing against me but wanted to bring his team.
I was a freelancer at the time, but Magyar Hirlap, a political daily in Budapest gave me daily assignments, so it was indeed my workplace.
I was just digesting the shock at the publisher´s office as a job came to the photo desk. No-one could take it for some reason, so I was asked by the very editor to do it for that last time.
It was about the once large scale industrial site on the island of Csepel in Budapest. Long vanished socialist industry, once flagship carmaking halls, uncertain future.
I could very much sympathise with that handful of workers I met there. I chose to alter the white balance of my camera to make these warm tones, creating a sepia look, supporting feelings of nostalgy and melancholy.
And that was a hit. At the time in 2004 no-one, I knew worked with raw images. We shot jpg. Meaning that one could not tweak the colour balance that easy afterwards in post-production. I made that on the spot as if I still used film. Dialling up meant, that I could also achieve a very cold look, blue lights pouring through those large windows. It was a great contrast to the sepia past, portraying the harsh realities awaiting.
Delivering this little essay earned me the front page and a seat at the photo desk!
Though later I was told that the previous editor, Tamás Szigeti came to my rescue and spoke of me highly behind the scenes. I´m still grateful for his inspiration and guidance.
(the resolution and small size of these images reflect on the internet of the mid-2000s, as they were featured on my website at the time)
2004, Csepel, Budapest, Hungary
Editorial about Autism
This is a making-of photo about an editorial shoot. The topic was autism, portraying families where one of the siblings would live with a various degree of the condition.
2015, Csákberény, Hungary
Culture Section Editorials
It was 10 years after the publication of these pictures as I went to the Central Library in Budapest to ask for a year worth of Magyar Hírlap archives.
It took me the whole afternoon to go through just the year 2005.
Given that these bundled up copies cannot be flatbed-scanned, I had to do good with these reproductions as photos.
Back then I particularly enjoyed the culture section assignments, I liked watching the last rehearsals in theatres and I had access to many concerts.
These were also good occasions to be allowed to switch off my phone.