Leland Bobbé


Leland Bobbé is an American photographer known for commercial portraiture and for personal work capturing fringe elements of society. He has made portraits of burlesque performers and drag queens; and street photography in New York City’s Times Square and the Bowery in the mid-1970s, eighteen of which are in the collection of the Museum of the City of New York.

Career

After two years at the New Division at Nasson College, Bobbé graduated from the State University of New York at Binghamton with a major in sociology in 1970. He then moved into New York City to pursue a career as a musician. He immediately bought his first 35 mm camera, and became obsessed with photography. His band City Lights was part of the CBGB scene in the mid-1970s and was the first such band to sign a recording contract. After signing to Sire Records, the band put out an album and toured. Bobbé photographed the Ramones, Patti Smith, Blondie, and Television among others. During this time he lived downtown below Chinatown in what was then the Fulton Fish Market, and supported himself by driving a taxi. He started to make photographs on the streets of New York City, focusing on seedy Times Square and the down and out men living on the Bowery.
After deciding to concentrate upon photography, Bobbé got a full-time job assisting Robert Farber, a fashion and fine art photographer, which he did for two years. In 1980 he went freelance. While working as an assistant, he started his first themed project, "Stormy Weather," black and white photos of discarded umbrellas on the streets of Manhattan. He showed them to the photo editor at Popular Photography and this became his first published personal project. In the later half of the decade Leland picked up his drum sticks once again and was the drummer in a rock trio called Johnny Jewel with frontman John Berenzy, releasing one album on 3rd Rail Records.
During this time he was working mainly as a beauty photographer, but after about 10 years he became disillusioned by the fashion scene and began to integrate his personal work into his commercial portfolio. This involved shooting real people geared to the advertising market with color, motion and blur that was present in his color street photography. Also during this time, Bobbé sought to have more control of his income so he became involved in the then booming business of stock photography, creating images for top agencies such as Getty Images, Corbis and Photonica. He served as president of Stock Artists Alliance from 2003-2004, a large advocacy group of professional stock shooters. He also began to concentrate on shooting real people portraits to get away from the lifestyle photography that he was producing for stock.

Influences

Bobbé’s inspirations for his photographs come from many places, both internal and external. As with most artists, he is influenced by other artists working both within and outside his discipline – in Bobbé’s case, photographers such as Harry Callahan, Steve Pyke, and Richard Avedon, as well as painters like Mark Rothko and Edward Hopper; he has also alluded to his inspirations coming from other art forms as well as from within himself: “All of my images reflect who I am as a person in some way. I’m still fueled by that state of mind created by listening to certain types of music," and saying in another interview, "I am influenced by music and film more than anything. For me it is about a state of mind rather than a specific photographic influence." Bobbés hometown of New York City has also undoubtedly played a major role in his work: “NYC is unlike anywhere else I’ve ever been. I’ve been saying for years that every time I go outside I’m liable to see something unique that captures my attention. Everything here is so accessible. The energy, the mix of people…as a photographer who is fascinated by people I couldn’t ask for anything more.”

Projects

Portrait