Shooting in the dark, with a handheld camera, in a vibrating helicopter, 5,000 feet above land sounds like a photographer’s nightmare. But Iwan Baan made it look easy.The Dutch photographer’s image of a half-illuminated, half-powerless New York City in the wake of Hurricane Sandy captured the nation’s attention on the cover of New York magazine.“It was the only way to show that New York was two cities, almost,” Baan said on the phone Sunday evening from Haiti.
“One was almost like a third world country where
everything was becoming scarce. Everything was complicated. And then another
was a completely vibrant, alive New York.” Baan made the image Wednesday night
after the storm, using the new Canon 1D X with the new 24-70mm lens on full
open aperture. The camera was set at 25,000 ISO, with a 1/40th of a second
shutter speed.
“[It was] the kind of shot which was impossible to take before
this camera was there,” Baan said. It was more difficult to rent a car than a
helicopter in New York the day after Sandy, Baan said. And because there was
such limited air traffic so soon after the storm, air traffic control allowed
Baan and the helicopter to hover very high above the city, a powerful advantage
for the photo. Shooting from a helicopter doesn’t faze Baan. He does it about
once a week, on average, all across the world. But he had never tried it in the
middle of the night before. Imagine crouching inside a vibrating helicopter,
clutching a handheld camera and peering down at the devastated landscape of a
city just ravaged by a storm that’s claimed more than 100 lives.
Now imagine what it feels like to have no door between you and that wide
expanse of nothing, just 46-degree air ripping around the sky. And somehow
managing, despite the darkness, to capture such a vivid, emotional snapshot. “With
these aerials you shoot a lot, bursts of images, to finally pick one out there
which is sharp,” Baan said. “It’s difficult if it’s freezing outside, you don’t
have a door, helicopter is moving and vibrating, etc., but you really work
towards an idea, visualization of that image which you have in mind.” Baan knew
before the helicopter left the ground what sort of image he wanted to achieve.
And once they landed, the process of selecting and submitting to New York
magazine editors was easy. The hour suspended above the earth was the hard
part. “In a way, it all worked out perfectly,” Baan said. “You never know when
something like this happens. If one thing would have changed, the picture
wouldn’t exist.” The photo captured not only the effects of Sandy, but the
reality of New York City on the eve of the 2012 election, he said. “What really
struck me, if you look at the image on the left, you see the Goldman Sachs
building and new World Trade Center,” said Baan. “These two buildings are
brightly lit. And then the rest of New York looks literally kind of powerless.
In a way, it shows also what’s wrong with the country in this moment.”
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