1) Why and when did you decide to become a photographer.
I never decided to become a photographer. It just happened.... In the
years 1995-2000 I was working as a flight attendant and I was always
taking my camera with me on my journeys to different countries. I had
an inside need to capture images that stuck in my mind. I always knew
I could best express myself visually; so I went to study cinematography
in NYC and photography in Israel and gradually I started dedicating
more and more time to photography. When my photos, still at an amateur
stage, started winning awards, it made me realise I am good at it ,
not only in my eyes, but in other people's eyes.
My passion became a way of life. I love it!
2) Why a photographer rather than a cinematographer, considering
your interest in the nature of reality/surreality.
Good question...:) My first interest was indeed cinematography. I studied
cinema first in the New York Film Academy in NY, and then continuing
in Tel-Aviv. Still, I love the loneliness, the independence, the flexibility
and the freedom of still photography. I need the one-on-one intimacy
when shooting people, and I enjoy just wandering around and letting
myself absorb the surroundings and being ready for surprises. This can
only happen is still photography. I love to discover, uncover and explore
the dual nature of reality/surreality, rather than create it. Still,
my vision and technique can be sometimes described as "cinematographic"
- some of my photos, especially my latest ones, have a "snapshot"
feel , a movement, they make you wait for the next action - like in
a movie...
3) What is your work about.
It is about self identity, self exploration. Even when I explore, or
manage to capture, a surreal moment, or a surreal vision of a place,
or a human being - it is my own inside really that I am capturing -
my psyche, my dreams, my surprise, my passion and my curiosity... and
for me the magic happens when my own personal impression or feeling
or mental state, clicks with that of the person who views my photo -
this connection is magic, and makes a photo unique. I believe that a
photo, like any piece of art can touch a "universal nerve"
only if it starts from a personal, intimate experience....
4) Where do you get your inspiration for your work.
I get inspiration from what I see and how it makes me feel - it can
be from a full moon on an empty square in Venice , or from someone's
eyelash . As from influences and professional inspiration - there are
many. My first big inspirational experience was when I watched the documentary
about the making of Citizen Kane - the big question of "who are
you" and how do you define a person, was something I immediately
recognised as a question I kept asking myself since I was a child. This
question ins in the back of my mind everytime I look through my camera
lens.
5) Viewing your photos is a strangely sensual experience. What
insights can you give, about your approach to photography and being
a photographer.
I am always asking questions, always searching, always trying to get
into the essence of things. Not to keep distance, not to "capture"
it as an outsider, but to be inside, part of the experience. I guess
this is primarily sensual, as you are using your senses to the maximum.
I believe all senses are connected - so when you use your visual sense
to the maximum, without feeling distant , and you are not afraid to
explore and search for the beauty and the surrealistic secret of your
object, your other senses get aroused as well. Some people say my photos
make them want to touch, to feel, to go "straight in". For
example my fruit stall image ("1700") I remember one of the
critics in an exhibition saying "It makes you want to jump straight
in". But this is exactly what I feel when I take them - and I am
glad my viewers feel the same...
6) How much do you think being gay influences your work. Is
it the reason for your search and experiments in dissecting 'reality'
and the nature of identity.
Perhaps not the reason, but the mean, or one of the means. Being gay
is in a way helping me to ask myself honest questions, it also taught
me not to compromise and go deeper and deeper into a question.
On a more physical level, being gay and living a so called "gay
lifestyle" gives me the opportunities of meeting people more easily
and more openly . For example I am using the gay chat websites to meet
potential "models" and do some "research" ...
the directness, variety, and sometime "cynical approach" of
gay encounters today, intrigues me and inspires me in many cases. Some
of my latest work is a direct result of moving to London, living in
Soho, and being exposed to this on a daily basis.
7) Your name is intriguing, is it one you made up.
Not at all. In fact it is quite a common name in Israel. where I come
from. Kobi is a common nickname of the Hebrew name Yaaqov (Jacob). People
might find it strange or entertaining that , especially in the light
of some of my more explicit work, my name has a strong biblical connotation
- both my first name and surname are different names of biblical Jacob.
Israel mean "fights with god", Jacob got this name after he
successfully fought with an angel. I have no intention of fighting with
any angels, just photographing them.. :)
8) Why and when did you move from Israel, and why to London.
I was originally a Londoner so I am personally interested to know what
you think of the city.
I love London. It is a place that inspires me. My second big passion
in life, after photography, is travelling. So, both independently and
as a past flight attendant I have been to so many places - but I must
say, nowadays I find London fascinating - it is perhaps the only true
"international" city in the world today - it belongs to the
world. When I walk out of my flat in Soho I hear so many languages,
see so many people from different places and culture - it is fascinating.
Manhattan used to be like that, but I think London now is taking the
lead- the multicultural diversity inspires creativity and interactions
between people from different places.
I am a foreigner in the UK, but I don't feel a foreigner in London.
I am inspired by what I see just walking in the streets. and I even
like the weather....
There's another thing about the UK - Going out of London, to the countryside
I somehow feel "at home" . I grew up in a residential suburb
of Tel Aviv - hot and grey most of the year. As a child I was a "dreamer"
. I was a big fan of the books of Enid Blyton . I remember the description
of the landscapes of the green hills, rain, clouds, misty air, and dreamt
about being there...
So, when I first travelled in the countryside I recognised the landscape
from my childhood fantasies, and I still feel this warmth of my childhood
home ( visionary, not real. but in my case - the visionary space can
be more real than reality...)
9) You have travelled extensively. What is the place you have
visited that has inspired you most artistically/photographically.
Every place I have been to inspired me in some way or another. But I
guess I felt "an extra magic" in Prague and in Lisbon....
Both places not only inspired me ,but in a way they have a special meaning
in my career - In Prague I took my first photo to get published and
win an award (Time Out travel photography award) .In Lisbon I nearly
lost my eyes when I took my head out of a tram trying to take a photo
when it was going uphill, hitting it into a poll... I still have the
scars.... I didn't learn my lesson and keep frightening my travel companions
when standing in the middle of a motorway or on the edge of a cliff
to take a photo...
10) What has been the most monumental moment in your career
so far.
Seeing my "fruit stall" (1700) photo displayed in the National
Portrait Gallery , as one of the finalists of the Schweppes annual Portrait
Prize competition last year...
11) Do you have any links with Brighton. Do you intend visiting
this large and famous gay community.
I don’t know much about Brighton, and am looking forward to exploring
it during the art fair. I know it is were Londoners go to the beach,
but living nearly all my life in seaside towns on the Mediterranean,
my "dream escape" was always to the green countryside. But
now, that I am living in London, I definitely miss the beach again,
and am really looking forward to discover Brighton. I know there is
a big gay scene in Brighton. I intended to come to Brighton pride this
year, but at the last moment I had a photo assignment for "Attitude"
magazine in Amsterdam...
12) What exhibitions are coming up for you over the next year.
When and where. What new work can we expect to see in the future.
I am working on new material for a new exhibition, looking for the
right space for it...
my main interest is now publishing my work.
My next project to be published is a new photography book called “Intimate
Strangers” which is due to come out in spring 2005
Ii is a project I worked on intensively in the last year, and most of
it was shot in Soho and Covent Garden in London. Some will see it as
the next stage after my first book "Views". It takes my intimate
experience with my objects a step further.... I won't tell you much
about it. I like to surprise... :)