Skip to main content
Tag

1005 Faces

Six Must-Attend Events: January 10-12 / Texas Monthly

By NEWS

By Michael Hoinski : Jan 10, 2014

San Antonio – Dream On
In San Antonio, proponents of peace and equality dream big. Dream Week, a 12-day celebration inspired by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and his “I Have a Dream” speech, is an ambitious homage. The anchor of this citywide event is a march on the final day, a longtime annual event drawing around 100,000 to San Antonio’s east side — and one of the largest such marches in the country. Leading up to that most stalwart of traditions are a number of programs centered on Dr. King, including an oratorical contest for students; the City Year M.L.K. Day of Service; and a commemorative lecture series, with Dr. Julianne Malveaux, whom the race-relations expert Cornel West called “the most iconoclastic public intellectual in the country.” Tying it all back to San Antonio is the 1005 Faces Mixer, highlighting the photographer Sarah Brooke Lyons’s 1,005 pictures of San Antonians.

Various locations, Jan. 10-21, dreamweek.org.

Source

San Antonio – Dream On / The New York Times

By NEWS

By Michael Hoinski : Jan 10, 2014

In San Antonio, proponents of peace and equality dream big. Dream Week, a 12-day celebration inspired by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and his “I Have a Dream” speech, is an ambitious homage. The anchor of this citywide event is a march on the final day, a longtime annual event drawing around 100,000 to San Antonio’s east side — and one of the largest such marches in the country.

Leading up to that most stalwart of traditions are a number of programs centered on Dr. King, including an oratorical contest for students; the City Year M.L.K. Day of Service; and a commemorative lecture series, with Dr. Julianne Malveaux, whom the race-relations expert Cornel West called “the most iconoclastic public intellectual in the country.” Tying it all back to San Antonio is the 1005 Faces Mixer, highlighting the photographer Sarah Brooke Lyons’s 1,005 pictures of San Antonians.

Various locations, Jan. 10-21, dreamweek.org.

Source

A sense of face in S.A.: Photographer uses portraits with messages to help define San Antonio / MySA

By NEWS


By Elda Silva : July 30, 2013

Sarah Brooke Lyons had practical reasons for shooting her portrait series “1005 Faces” in black and white, including maintaining visual continuity.

More important, however, she wanted people to look — really look — at her subjects, each photographed holding a piece of placard inscribed with a short personal message.

“With a black-and-white image, you’re sort of forced to look at certain things,” said Lyons, who began the project in February to document the cultural diversity in San Antonio. “You’re not going to look at skin color. You’re not going to look so much at outfits. It forces you to look at the character of the face, and it forces you to look at the words.”

A mural of images culled from the series was installed recently at the former home of the Texas Highway Patrol Museum in Southtown. While there are a couple of familiar faces in the crowd — Hello, Spurs Jesus! How’s it going, David Robinson? — many look like people you might cross paths with at the grocery store or Starbucks.

Lyons, 30, started working on the project after taking photographs at a series of events held in conjunction with DreamWeek, a summit focusing on issues facing multicultural communities.

“I was inundated with diversity, and I came away with so many images,” she said. “I was talking with a friend of mine, and he said, ‘You probably have 1,000 really different faces that you could pull out of this, and it would look like San Antonio. It would be this diverse group.’

“I thought that was a really interesting concept, but I wanted to sort of explore that organically, so I took that idea and sort of ran with it.”

Born in San Antonio, Lyons divided her early childhood between Boerne and Harlingen and spent her middle and high school years in Castroville. She briefly attended the University of Texas at Austin before returning to San Antonio, where she has family. At the time, Lyons didn’t want to quit school, but she wasn’t ready to plunge back completely into academic life.

“I thought, ‘I’ll just take photography at (San Antonio College). It sounds really easy,’” she said.

It wasn’t long before she realized she’d found her passion.

“I just became obsessed at that point,” said Lyons, who has a tattoo of a smiley face on the inside of the index finger of her right hand to remind subjects to smile when she clicks the shutter. “It was film, so I was in the darkroom until it would close. They would have to kick me out. It was a kind of therapy for me, developing film and watching paper change and the image produce. I ended up taking all the photography classes they had.”

The bulk of Lyons’ work is business portraits. The freelance photographer also has done work for local publications, and last year, she had an exhibit of her fine art photography — images of Burkina Faso she took while on a missionary trip to the African country with Oak Hills Church.

So far, she has taken about 600 portraits for the “1005 Faces” project, some of them at events hosted by businesses such as The Mighty Group, a marketing firm, Local Coffee and Whole Foods. She chose the number 1,005 because it was more interesting than a round 1,000.

“(It) makes you stop and think and wonder and get curious and ask questions and stay engaged a little bit longer,” she said.

Lyons isn’t necessarily trying to accurately reflect San Antonio’s demographics — “Whatever happens,” she said — and a scan of her Facebook page reveals images that seem to skew toward young urban professionals. But she is interested in capturing members of certain subcultures. And she has an eye on certain public figures and community leaders.

“I want some punk rockers, and I want some of the medical community and some wounded warriors and some military,” she said. “And then there’s some key people I want to get like Graham Weston and Max Lucado and the mayor and his brother.”

The idea behind the signs in the portraits was to give each subject an opportunity “to contribute, really making it community art,” Lyons said. “It’s just whatever anybody wants to write, as long as it’s not vulgar.”

Shokare Nakpodia, creative director of The Mighty Group and founder of DreamWeek, boiled down his message to the essentials.

“I always think I have a lot to say, but it had just come after DreamWeek and mine was just two words — ‘Dream big,’” he said.

A native of Lagos, Nigeria, Nakpodia has lived in San Antonio for about 10 years. He thinks that “1005 Faces,” like DreamWeek and events such as Luminaria, has the potential to create connections between people living in different points of the city separated by urban sprawl.

“That’s why ‘1005 Faces’ is so important. You have some of the usual suspects, but you have a ton of other people that folks look at and go, ‘Really, this person lives here?’” he said.

Nan Palmero, a business growth expert on staff with the consulting firm Salesby5, is likewise a supporter of the project and a subject.

“I saw some of my friends had gotten photographed by Sarah for the project, and I thought it was really cool, so I just messaged her and said, ‘I think this is awesome. How can I help?’” he said.

For his portrait, Palmero chose to pose with a sign that reads “Rules are ruining your life.”

“There are a lot of rules that are simply in place for the efficiencies of the organizations that are putting the rules in place rather than trying to keep us safe or for a greater purpose,” he said. “’Should we try to go backstage?’ ‘Should we try to get into this event?’ ‘Should we try to ask for the things that we want?’ Yeah, maybe we should. Oftentimes, when we do, people go, ‘Yeah, sure you can do that. Come on!’”

Dayna De Hoyos had no words. Instead the artist, who is a close friend of Lyons, used symbols to reflect her Comanche heritage. The same symbols adorned her wedding dress.

“I think the project is a great vehicle for different parts of the population to merge,” De Hoyos said. “Although we are a melting pot, there are different populaces that don’t mix — not in terms of ethnicity, but in terms of economics. In this art context, everyone’s together in one pot and it’s nice to see that.”

Lyons was able to fund the mural in Southtown with a grant she received from Awesome SA, a group that distributes $1,000 each month “to awesome projects that enhance the San Antonio community.” Eventually, she hopes to have murals around the city.

“San Antonio gets a bad rap for being dull and boring, and I get to meet so many cool people all the time,” she said. “So this is my way of trying to rebrand San Antonio. This is what we actually look like. We’re really interesting people. We have interesting thoughts and interesting things to say, and we’re doing cool stuff.”

1005 Faces Project a Look at the Real San Antonio / San Antonio Express News

By NEWS

By Elaine Ayala : July 28, 2013

Katy Castillo

Katy Castillo

Sarah Lyons’ project sounded simple enough: Get an interesting cross-section of San Antonians to write down a few words on an 8 ½- by 11-inch white board and shoot a crisp black-and-white image of them holding it.

Little did Lyons know that a marker board ultimately would offer such powerful and prophetic missives, or that they’d provoke such laughter or contemplation.

Along the way, 1005 Faces, the name of the work, has bloomed into a public art project and unexpected teaching tool.

It was born out of this year’s inaugural DreamWeek San Antonio, a series of events commemorating Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech.

As she photographed its 30 events over 12 days, the city’s diversity took center stage. DreamWeek creator Sho Nakpodia remarked afterward that Lyons had 1,000 faces of San Antonio. That, as they say, was that.

She has reached the half-way mark and, already, you can see her images across the street from Rosario’s in Southtown, on her web site and Facebook page. Her goals include murals near Rittiman at Interstate 35 and Marbach at Loop 410, “spots that don’t get touched by public art.”

Her images tell an evocative story of a city — from Venus Prado’s self-description as “Human” and Andrés Durá’s thought-provoking “Native Immigrant,” and from the woman channeling Doris Day’s “Que Sera Sera” to David Robinson’s “Trust in the Lord” and “Go Spurs.”

Lyons, a native San Antonian and summa cum laude graduate of the University of Texas at San Antonio in 2009, was drawn to photography after a traumatic experience. A boyfriend accidentally killed himself a few days after she had taken photos of him.

The residual power of those images led her to a professional-quality camera. She signed up for a class at San Antonio College and, “Before I knew it, I’d taken all the classes.”

David Robinson

David Robinson

For 1005 Faces, she has gone to Rackspace’s Geekdom and a South Side park, to a Marie Antoinettish photo shoot and to a place where belly dancers do their thing.

The project’s messages are as wide-ranging as their writers. They caution to “Claim progress rather than perfection,” and to “Pray to God but row toward the shore.”

“If Plan A doesn’t work,” an optimist offers, “remember there are 25 other letters in the alphabet.” And while one cautions to “Start small,” Nakpodia dares us to “Dream big.”

Other notes and faces are fun or fanciful. Lyons’ daughter wrote, “Sup.” A doctor warned, “I see things in you others don’t.” Some explained a philosophy: “Dress British, Think Yiddish,” or admitted that “White boards make me look fat.”

Lyons won a $1,000 grant from the Awesome Foundation, which paid for a mural at the corner of Alamo and St. Mary’s streets. The building’s new owner is interested in underwriting a similar mural on the other side.

Lyons’ dream is to show at the Institute of Texan Cultures or the San Antonio International Airport. That would give people a different view of San Antonio, instead of “Welcome to the party,” which has become the city’s brand.

Venus Prado

Venus Prado

Lyons plans to complete the project in time for next year’s DreamWeek, when she’ll exhibit 1005 Faces.

She’s not quite done reaching out to more of San Antonio. She plans to include San Antonio’s elderly, its punk rockers and drag queens, too.

Lyons wants to include faces of refugees, wounded warriors, the medical community and well-known people, including Mayor Julián Castro, philanthropist Red McCombs, author Sandra Cisneros and perhaps the most elusive of all — actor Tommy Lee Jones.

A girl can dream.

eayala@express-news.net

Twitter: @ElaineAyala

1005 Faces

Sarah Lyons Photography

DreamWeek San Antonio

The Awesome Foundation

Source

1005 Faces by Sarah Brooke Lyons / The Rivard Report

By NEWS

By Rivard Report Staff : March 25, 2013

Local photographer Sarah Brooke Lyons.

Local photographer Sarah Brooke Lyons.

Sarah Brooke Lyons: 1005 Faces was created to showcase the diversity of San Antonio through the faces and thoughts of our community, and in doing so provide a clear image of what our San Antonio really looks like. I want to bring together the innovators, creatives, and any other awesome people in our city to celebrate and explore the future of San Antonio – away from the stereotypes of River Walk and margaritas. I’m looking forward to a future where San Antonio is seen as a cosmopolitan, multicultural epicenter with eclectic people looking to create an awesome place to live.

After spending 10 days photographing various multicultural events with DreamWeek San Antonio (a production of DreamVoice LLC), I was excited to continue their vision. I want to celebrate the incredible people here! 1005 Faces is a collaborative art project as it can only be created by the coming together of friends and strangers to create the full scope, and fulfill the goal of photographing 1005 distinct faces.

RR: Some of these folks are people the general public can recognize – local celebrities, some may only be recognized by friends and family. What criteria/thought process do you use when deciding who to photograph?

SBL: When all 1,005 faces have been photographed, I want to be able to show a very diverse group of faces, styles, ages, ethnicities, and ideas of the San Antonio community. I’ve begun by partnering with individuals who have similar visions for the city, and extending into their social network. Along with individuals, I have reached out to other various organizations, restaurants, coffee shops, and generally cool businesses that are making San Antonio incredible, and showcasing the faces associated with those groups.

Founding Partner and Creative Director of The MightyGroup and Dream Week President and Co-founder San Antonio Shokare Nikori Nakpodia.

Founding Partner and Creative Director of The MightyGroup and Dream Week President and Co-founder San Antonio Shokare Nikori Nakpodia.

I hope to be able to document some of the refugee population, more of the aging population, and a more niche interests groups. The best part of the project so far has been the great conversation I have had, and interesting people I have met. I have enjoyed keeping the sessions to small groups so that I can take my time getting to know people with each portrait.

[On April 6, during First Friday festivities, DreamVoice will be hosting a gathering for Sarah to capture more San Antonio faces at 1160 E. Commerce Suite 200. Check out the Facebook event page.]

RR: What’s the endgame – what message do you hope people will take away from this collection?

SBL: I would like to culminate the project with large-scale public art pieces located throughout the city giving a more tangible representation of the vision that San Antonio is innovative and interesting and fill of awesome people. I hope that through this project people will be able to look at the city through a different lens, beyond the typical cliché’s associated with San Antonio.

In our city we have so many incredible people doing interesting things, but there is very little unification to these efforts. When we think of art in San Antonio, the general association is with downtown, or Blue Star, but all over the city there are people are creating and innovating. This project is a visual reminder of the great number of people here that are instrumental in the direction our city is headed, and hopefully it will unify some of these efforts.

RR: Why black and white?

SBL: I want the photos to be very unified and consistent. Photographing in black and white takes away any distraction that color may play, and allows you to focus on the person’s face and their message. I also had a mug shot in mind for the composition, and wanted to stay with that feel. A very straight forward representation of self.

#52, Byrdie Franco. Photo by Sarah Brooke Lyons.

#52, Byrdie Franco. Photo by Sarah Brooke Lyons.

RR: What’s the significance of the accompanying words?

SBL: I give very little guidance in what to put on the sign, because I want each person’s interpretation to be unique. As a community art piece, I want everyone to have a say in contributing what they believe their sign should like. By having no guidelines, I have a true reflection of a diversity of thoughts and ideas, not just faces. I have found it fascinating the different ways that people want to be able to contribute their statement. Some people best express themselves with a drawing, others see it as on opportunity to leave a profound message, and others just want to be funny or ironic.
RR: Why 1,005? Why not 1,000?

SBL: Because 1006 is too much, and 1000 isn’t enough.

RR: How many photos do you have so far? How long do you expect it will take to get all 1,005?

SBL: I’ve photographed around 200 so far in about a month’s time. I expect to be done by the end of the year, if not sooner – but I am putting absolutely no deadline on it. I want to be able to really enjoy the experience of meeting new people and having great conversations.

RR: Is there anyone in particular that you’d like to photograph in the future?

SBL: Mayor Julian Castro, and his brother Joaquin Castro, David Robinson, Pastor Max Lucado and his wife Denalyn, Bill Greehy, George Strait, Gordan Hartman, Jason Dady, Andrew Weisman, and a few of the Spurs. There are also a few groups I would love to have represented such as the refugees here in town and members of the military.

RR: Photography is your full time job – a position that is difficult to achieve for many young photographers. How did you develop your craft/business?

SBL: As a single parent I think sheer necessity for survival and absolute passion have given me no other option than to work as hard as I possibly can. I studied photography at San Antonio College, and finished up my associates degree there. After I had my daughter, I went back to school to become a teacher, and began photographing as a part-time job to get through school.

Homes in Burkina Faso. Photo by Sarah Brooke Lyons.

Homes in Burkina Faso. Photo by Sarah Brooke Lyons.

By the time I finished my degree I realized that teaching was not for me, and went into photography full force. I’ve worked incredibly hard since then, taking every job I could. I’ve worked for other photographers as assistants, second shooters, and photo editors. I’ve stayed up all night editing, and responding to emails. I’ve just generally been working really hard for quite a while, and don’t intend to stop working really hard until my dreams become my reality.
RR: What’s the (technically) hardest photograph you’ve ever taken?

SBL: The most difficult technical shots for me are product photography involving glass or particularly shiny surfaces. They are just really hard to light correctly. I’ve learned to pass these along to other photographers, and stick to the people shots.
RR: What’s the (emotionally) hardest photograph you’ve ever taken?

SBL: The hardest photos I’ve taken emotionally were from a trip to Burkina Faso, Africa. I wanted to effectively convey the desperation and urgency of the situation of the people there, but didn’t want to create photos that elicited pity and showcased the typical “starving orphan” image.

Boys relax in the shade in a village in Burkina Faso. Photo by Sarah Brooke Lyons.

Boys relax in the shade in a village in Burkina Faso. Photo by Sarah Brooke Lyons.

There was a joy and beauty among the people of Burkina Faso, and they held within themselves such strength and humanity, and I wanted all of that to come through in my images. It also made me feel like I wasn’t doing enough, and that left me with new-found sense of determination to shine a light into the darkness through photography. This lit a fire in me to find a way to document and effectively convey the needs of others in hope of lighting this passion in the hearts of those who can help.
RR: How can people get a hold of you? [website, email, FB, twitter etc?]

Email: smile@sarahpix.com

Website: www.sarahbrookephotography.com

The project itself is up on Facebook at 1005 Faces.

They can also find me on facebook at Sarah Brooke Lyons or Sarah Brooke Photography.

Source