Rangefinder Magazine
November 2004
The Last Word
Within minutes of the announcement on September 26 that Don Blair had passed
away, there was an eerie silence in every studio that stretched from Utah around
the globe. It was simply inconceivable that he was no longer with us.
“Big Daddy” was the recipient of virtually every award and honor
in professional photography. Over the last 64 years his presence in photography
has been as consistent as the daily window light he used so often in his portraiture.
It’s hard to imagine he’s gone, but here’s the beauty of
what he achieved—maybe he hasn’t left us at all…
There are
hundreds of thousands of photographs created every year all over the world
using the lighting and posing techniques Don Blair taught and often had created.
If immortality and success can be defined as the number of lives a person has
touched, Don Blair has plenty of both.
He never compromised on quality and
never quit a single project he ever started, no matter how impossible it might
have been. He was an ambassador for much more than just photography. He was
an ambassador for life with an unmatched passion for the human spirit and friendships.
Lord
Alfred Tennyson wrote, “I am a part of all that I have met.” Every
professional photographer who ever attended one of Don’s seminars or
met him at a convention became as much a part of Big Daddy’s life as
he did theirs.
The mark of a great portrait lies in the ability of the photographer
to capture the essence of the subject in the lighting, the pose and the expression.
Nobody could have captured Big Daddy better than in this image created by two
of his closest friends, Louise and Joseph Simone, just two years ago.
If you’re real quiet and just stare into this image you can almost hear
him thanking you for being a part of his life and the profession he loved so
much.
As he so often said to all of us, “Hey, I love ya man!”
—Skip
Cohen
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