
Buggsy and Duke.
Bugsy and Duke, 1969
This photo seems a good starting point for my rebranded website. It's funny how often I find broader meanings in images I once dismissed as insignificant. One of the things I love about photography is how images continue developing over time.
Bugsy the iguana and Duke coexisted peacefully as pets of a friend. Timid Duke was apprehensive of Bugsy, who spent most of his day in the branches of a plastic tree (also his toilet) basking in the light of a living room lamp.
Once time when Bugsy was taken outside for fresh air and sunshine, he sprinted towards the chain link fence with me and my friends chasing after him. I caught him first, or so I thought, quickly realizing all I had was his tail. I didn't know an Iguana's tail could just drop away like that.
We caught him quickly enough, and his tail slowly grew back.. Unfortunately, there was always a knot where it had broken and I don't think my friends ever forgave me for that. Bugs rarely got out of the house again, but he was well cared for and lived a long, contented life.
Things in this image that used to make me cringe - the bare flash, the garish colors, the iguana's disinterested look and those harsh reflections in the plastic-entombed couch (people did that in the 60s) now give the photo an historical context.
I'm glad this image survived so many of my ruthless edits.
Comments
Karla McDuffie (not verified)
You are so right! Photos gain value over time. When I was teaching art at the Columbia Lighthouse for the Blind in the older adult program, (yes, we did produce great art with older blind students) one of the 75 - 80 year-olds remarked: You might not like a picture of yourself - but give it 20 years; you'll look back and say, "Damn, I looked good!"
Dan Murano
So true - I tell myself that every time.
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