From Momentoo: Faces of Corus
12.02.2005 During the Wijk aan Zee Chess Tournament players were periodically hijacked on their way to the hall, enticed into a special room. It was the photo studio of Fred Lucas, the photographer doing the visuals for the official web site. Remarkable work. Fred has selected twelve of his own favourites for a review of Wijk.
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Visiting Wijk
aan Zee 2005 was fun, for many reasons. The extraordinarily exciting
chess was a pleasure to watch. But it was also the work of a number of
talented photographers that made the event so memorable.
The professional
amongst the camera-wielding crowd was Fred Lucas, well
known to our readers from past galleries (see links at the bottom). Fred
was the official Corus photographer, walking around with a giant lens
with great light-gathering power, getting candid and unusual photos of
players in action. |
We learnt a lot from Fred during our stay in Wijk. For instance the importance
of white-balancing your camera before going on the hunt, so that your pictures
don't all look as though a sever case of jaundice had hit the participants.
Or how to steady a camera in very poor lighting (see picture below). Part of
the improved quality of our own photographic efforts can be directly traced
to the lessons we receive at the hands of this professional.
As the official Corus photographer Fred Lucas had his own little studio, where
he could conduct proper photo shoots with the players, with lights and props,
and perfect eye contact. On his Momentoo site there are over 200 pictures to
see, and many more on the official Corus web pages (links below). We asked
Fred to select his twelve favourites and present these to you as a review of
the great tournament.
Fred Lucas: Faces of Corus
Judit Polgar; Hungary
Veselin Topalov, Bulgaria
Parimarjan Negi, India
Alexander Grischuk, Russia
Vladimir Georgiev from Bulgaria
Alexander Grischuk, Russia
Vishy Anand, India, Vladimir Kramnik, Russia
Natalia Zhukova, Ukraine
Loek van Wely, Holland
Nigel Short, England
Parimarjan Negi, India
Magnus Carlsen, Norway
"My
relation with chess is simple," says Fred Lucas. "I'm a photographer who is
very fond of the game, loves the atmosphere at tournaments – it's if you can
really feel all the ideas coming up on all those boards – and I love to make
pictures, especially with available light. What I like most when photographing
chess players is to get their emotions that are otherwise hard to see, because
life immediately proceeds to the next moment. Before the start of a game most
players are busy with themselves, concentrating and some give you the impression
that they really don't want to pay attention to anything else than the game
to come."
Links
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