Portraiture

Coffee Shop People

Photographer Gordon Scammell shoots covert portraits in coffee shops and captures people as they sit to relax..

Gordon drinks coffee. Lots of coffee. Probably way too much coffee. He is also an avid people-watcher. “I visit various coffee shops on a daily basis and enjoy observing the other customers. A few years ago I was out and about in my home town in Essex with my cameras and decided to pop into a well-known coffee shop for a swift livener. I happened to notice that when customers came in and sat at a table there was a moment of ‘stillness’. A moment when they seemed to relax into themselves and stare into space. Can’t really describe it any better. I was fascinated and managed to photograph a customer having that moment of ‘stillness’. When I edited the image I was quite captivated and thought it could develop into an ongoing project.”

Coffee-Shop People has now blossomed into an ongoing project that is still developing.

I have set some rules for myself. I won’t photograph anyone eating and I won’t keep any images that show people in a bad light.  It is a form of self-censorship. However, the images must be candid. If people were aware of me I would lose that ‘magical moment’ and the project would be pointless.

Instead of noisy Nikons I now use a Fuji XT3 in silent mode. Subterfuge? Absolutely! I have always been a great admirer of the work produced by the American photographer, Walker Evans and his sublime ‘Subway Portraits’.

I wouldn’t go as far as he did – painting his 35mm Contax camera black and hiding it under my overcoat – but I have been known to occasionally pretend to use a small screwdriver to ‘repair’ my camera as I take the photograph. If it’s good enough for Walker Evans then it is good enough for me – but I’ll always struggle with the moral maze of doing this project.

Is there an end to this project? “No idea. At the moment I am way too fascinated to turn my back on people and their visits to coffee shops.”

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The photographer

Gordon Scammell

No matter what job Gordon has had, he always had a camera near at hand. He mainly photographs for the stock market now but due to his life-long involvement with theatre and the performing arts, he is passionate about photographing any genre of performance work.

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