Isabella: If you weren’t a photographer, what would you be?
Nick Ray McCann: Some sort of craftsman, that would be incredible. I grew up building and customizing things; guitars, stereos, bicycles, I love working with wood and metal especially.
Isabella: What does photography mean to you? What made you start?
Nick Ray McCann: I’ve always loved getting a rise out of people. I did portraits in high school where I would sit people down and startle them with an air horn the moment I shot the picture. Emotions and interactions have always been my favorite things to photograph.
Isabella: How many pictures have you taken since you started?
Nick Ray McCann: 352,995,128,869,100,1923.
Isabella: Who or what would you love to shoot that you haven’t already?
Nick Ray McCann: I photograph rap concerts and wild parties because that’s what I’m up to, that’s my world. I look forward to getting older, and seeing how that changes my subject matter and my interests. In the short term I’m currently working on a series of still life images of those gross little snack cakes you find at gas stations and bodegas. Photographing objects is nothing like photographing people so I figured I’d give it a whirl and maybe learn something new.
Isabella: What kind of situations or images make you feel it’s time to push the button and hear the click of the shutter?
Nick Ray McCann: I watch a lot of films and listen to even more music, I love how stories are told and how scenes are visualized. So when I photograph people I look for very cinematic, larger than life, characters and situations.
Isabella: What do you think about technology? Analog or digital? What camera do you use?
Nick Ray McCann: In high school I shot Type 55 Polaroids with my teacher’s old 4×5 camera, but to make the imagery I love I tend to stick to 35mm and 120, they’re better for capturing spontaneity. The whole digital v. analog debate is so bogus, it’s all about concept not the toys. I’ve recently traveled through India, China, and Hong Kong working as a digital tech and photographed exclusively with my iPhone 4 because that’s all I had. On my own time I’ve been shooting a ton of portraits with this old Mamiya m645.
Isabella: Do you have a favorite photographer?
Nick Ray McCann: Making great photographs of people is only possible with great communication and trust. I love documentary photographers like Bruce Davidson and Boogie who take huge risks and go beyond most people’s comfort zones, but also celebrity photographers like Autumn de Wilde and Danny Clinch who form great relationships with their subjects and photograph people with the trust of close friends on summer vacation. Dan Winters is also a favorite of mine, he works with patience and simplicity, which are also really important.
Isabella: To be a good photographer you have to…..
Nick Ray McCann: …know what you want and be patient…
Thank you so much, keep on with the great job.
Nick Ray McCann on ElitismStyle
















































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