
This is another portrait from the Reflections at the Footlight project I did a while back.
Tonee was the stage manager during that project, so we found an interesting piece of the backstage area to set up her portrait.
We lit her with a large octabank in the front and an umbrella from behind.
She walked onto our set and we had our image in no time. On to the next set up!
Monday, May 12, 2008
Real People Portraits
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Labels: Black and White, book project, photography, Real people portraits
Monday, May 05, 2008
Power Lunch- Redefined

Ah, kids.
Brian Heil, over at Hue Brand Group, creative directed this project, for a non-profit reading program. We had a lot of fun playing with the kids and they, I think, had a lot of fun with us.
The challenge, as always, is to keep their attention span. Or, at least, direct their attention to what we need to accomplish.
I learned a lot from this shoot. One of the kids taught me some of the worst knock knock jokes ever!
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Labels: advertising, Black and White, commercial photography, concept, corporate, education, photography, Real people portraits
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Create Magazine's Editor's Choice --Correction


Whoops! I guess people really do read my blog. I was just informed that the picture I posted in the first press release was one of the nominees but not one of the winners.
And, not to brag, but I got two Advertiser Awards!
Both of the ads were put together from images created to promote the Footlight Club, America's Oldest Community Theater.
This one was for their production of Charles Busch's classic spoof of Vampire Lesbians of Sodom and Sleeping Beauty or Coma.
In a rather bizarre turn of events, right before we concepted this poster, A&E ran a show about Mr. Busch and introduced me to his creatively spoofy world.
I had had an opportunity to come up with a poster for the Club's earlier Busch production of Psycho Beach Party.
The best part of these productions is working with comedic character actors. Rodney Raftery and Eric Greimann were a blast to work with and the difficult part was narrowing down which images to use.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MATTHEW MCKEE PHOTOGRAPHY WON THE AD MOST LIKELY TO GRAB YOUR ATTENTION AWARD AND THE BEST SHOT AWARD IN CREATE MAGAZINE’S EDITOR’S CHOICE AWARDS
Orlando, FL, April 16, 2008 – Matthew McKee Photography won the A Most Likely to Grab Your Attention and Best Shot crowns in Create Magazine’s Editor’s Choice Awards. Engel conquered tens of other candidates to earn the title and was selected based on their originality and unstoppable design. The award-winning works dazzled the world in the Sep+Oct 2007 Northeast issue and the May+June 2007 Northeast issues respectively.
“Matthew McKee Photography produces consistently stimulating and innovative ads that never cease to impress,” said Create Magazine Editor Dana R. DeLapi. “Their work is always impressive and perfectly complements the message of Create Magazine.”
Create Magazine has seen some fantastic creativity grace its pages in the last year. From advertising to design, writing to gadgets, the Create Team has singled out the best of the best in a showcase for the May+June 2008 issue. With fun quirky categories like “Most Likely to Make you LOL,” the Editor’s Choice Awards provide recognition based on a different set of criteria.
The May+June issue of Create Magazine will be on newsstands on May 12, 2008. Create is also available online at www.createmagazine.com for Create Magazine subscribers and Create Network members.
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Labels: actors, award, commercial photography, create, mckee photography, poster, surreal
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
In the lab...

Lab work is always very serious business. Creating photography to illustrate this serious business is serious business. And, everyone involved in the project is serious at all times, because this is serious.
Seriously.
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Labels: biotech, corporate, industrial photography, Real people portraits
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Create Magazine's Editor's Choice Award

Hey, Wow! Thanks!
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MATTHEW MCKEE PHOTOGRAPHY WON THE AD MOST LIKELY TO GRAB YOUR ATTENTION AWARD AND THE BEST SHOT AWARD IN CREATE MAGAZINE’S EDITOR’S CHOICE AWARDS
Orlando, FL, April 16, 2008 – Matthew McKee Photography won the A Most Likely to Grab Your Attention and Best Shot crowns in Create Magazine’s Editor’s Choice Awards. Engel conquered tens of other candidates to earn the title and was selected based on their originality and unstoppable design. The award-winning works dazzled the world in the Sep+Oct 2007 Northeast issue and the May+June 2007 Northeast issues respectively.
“Matthew McKee Photography produces consistently stimulating and innovative ads that never cease to impress,” said Create Magazine Editor Dana R. DeLapi. “Their work is always impressive and perfectly complements the message of Create Magazine.”
Create Magazine has seen some fantastic creativity grace its pages in the last year. From advertising to design, writing to gadgets, the Create Team has singled out the best of the best in a showcase for the May+June 2008 issue. With fun quirky categories like “Most Likely to Make you LOL,” the Editor’s Choice Awards provide recognition based on a different set of criteria.
The May+June issue of Create Magazine will be on newsstands on May 12, 2008. Create is also available online at www.createmagazine.com for Create Magazine subscribers and Create Network members.
This was one of the ads. The image was from one of the poster campaigns for the Footlight Club, during their production of Charles Buch's Psycho Beach Party.
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Labels: Boston, commercial photography, editorial photography
Monday, April 21, 2008
Izzi's in the House!

It is amazing to me to watch kids work at things that excite them.
They bring so much passion to a project. Sometimes they bring a little chaos as well, but not so here.
Izzi, who's parents are involved in productions at the Footlight Club, came to the shoot fully prepared. In fact, she asked Joy, my stylist and make up person on set, about where paint should be placed on her shirt to make it more effective and authentic.
She was fully engaged in her portrait and a great collaborator!
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Labels: Black and White, commercial photography, location photography, Real people portraits
Monday, April 14, 2008
Industrial Lighting and Adapting Photography

So, there we were, in a dark room, with a gazillion volts of electricity stored in huge banks of batteries. High voltage signage everywhere. A deep hum, charged with menace, replaces the whir of ventilation fans from the data center we were just shooting in.
We went from brilliant flat lighting to almost no lighting at all. And, the concept called for shooting into a dark cabinet, while the technician does... well, whatever they do in there. (When I asked him, he said, "Mostly, we try not to get zapped!")
I looked up and saw three different tubes of flourescent lighting, two tungsten cans and something that may have been a mercury vapor.
I looked at my assistant, who shrugged back at me, and I said, "Get the secret weapon!"
Under the technician's careful supervision, we tucked it back in the cabinet and plugged it in. Added a couple of gelled lights and reflectors around the outside and started shooting.
So, what is the secret weapon? An LED worklight from the hardware store.
Perfect for those hard to reach, tucked in spaces, to add dimensionality to any photoshoot!
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Labels: annual report, commercial photography, industrial photography, location photography, matt mckee
Friday, April 04, 2008
The Knightly Arts

Well, this was an exciting shoot! This guy is a practicing swordsman and has won awards around the world. He showed up with two suits of armor and lots of stories.
If you are interested, he runs a school for sword play and other martial arts involving edged weapons. Check it out at http://www.knightlyarts.com.
We are having a conversation about a series of marketing images for the school. Could be really interesting.
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Labels: actors marketing photography book project, advertising, costume, editorial photography, mckee photography, model photography, props, Real people portraits
Friday, March 21, 2008
The rabbits have invaded my home!

Omg, it's rabbit season again!
Every spring, they show up on a certain Sunday morning and leave little chocolate droppings around the house for the kiddies to find.
Jacked up on said chocolate, the kids spend the rest of the day climbing the pews at church and then fighting amongst themselves for the last morsel to stave off the inevitable sugar crash.
And, of course, there is always that one little foil covered confection that comes out, covered in dust bunnies and cobwebs, wearing last years (or the year before?) colors.
It was hiding behind the remote that was lost two tvs ago.
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Labels: advertising, candy, commercial photography, concept, easter, editorial photography, still life
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
A Stock Conversation

Last week, I was in a meeting with a medium sized ad agency art buyer, showing her samples of my black and white work. She got enthusiastic about the work and started rattling off projects where this work would be appropriate.
As I watched, her face fell a bit when she tagged the conversation with, "But, we are having a hard time getting them away from royalty free stock images. Despite the fact that the images they choose keep showing up in [their competition's] collateral and ads."
I had another conversation over the phone with a head of a small design agency. She said that they used royalty free stock all the time. Yes, the images would show up in other companies' marketing materials. But, none of her clients were national, so it didn't really matter.
During a coffee conversation with an art director, he lamented that he was spending hours retouching and repurposing stock images to fit marketing concepts. By the time he was finished, he was billing as much in retouching fees as a custom shoot would have cost. And, the image still looked enough like the original that 5000 brochures were recycled when it showed up as the back wall of the competition's booth at a trade show.
I am not one to jump up and down and try to convince you that stock is bad and evil. It isn't. And, in some places, it is very appropriate. Even the royalty free stuff. Sometimes.
However, if you are working hard, spending lots of money and energy, trying to differentiate yourself - your company - from everyone else within your market, what is going to happen when the big national financial firm across the street is using the same image for their brochures that you have for yours?
Original marketing photography, like every other element of a company, is an investment. There is no get rich quick scheme. There is no short cut. There is no silver bullet.
And, in marketing, the payoff is directly related to your investment.
Great, original work will get you recognized. Great, copycat work... will get the other folks recognized...
The original image above was created to promote a production of "Anything Cole".
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Labels: Black and White, branding, commercial photography, marketing photography, mckee photography



