PDN WEB  

ADVERTISEMENT





Recent Issues

Photo © John Michael Cooper

Photo © Joni Sternbach

Photos Clockwise From Top Left: © Jonathan Torgovnik; © James Nachtwey / VII; © Zackary Canepari; © Benjamin Drummond

Storytellers: Rafael Soldi

A student photographer transforms the unseen struggles of young dancers into a beautiful solo exhibit.

July 31, 2009

Save | E-mail | Print | Most Popular | RSS | Reprints

By Julie Gallagher


Rafael Soldi

© Rafael Soldi

Portraits of a Dancer: Rafael Soldi sought to portray the dancer as a person who chooses to dance, rather than as a person with an ability to move his or her body in ways that no one else can. "It is common to see photographs in which the dancer is objectified," he explains, "photos of a body and not of a person."



Rafael Soldi was grappling with his own creative conflict when the idea to document the dichotomy between an artist’s means and end sprang from an image captured by photographer Stefan Ruiz.

“I was coming from a place where I was really struggling with my work and I didn’t know where I was going or what I was doing,” says the Peruvian national as he looks back on the start of his junior year at the Maryland Institute College of Art. That feeling was reflected in the subject of Ruiz’s image.

“It was a straightforward portrait of a female dancer, and she looked gorgeous, but there was something very telling about her eyes,” Soldi says. “It’s such a beautiful thing when dancers are gliding across the stage—it looks almost effortless—but the preparation for that one very beautiful performance is a very ugly one.”

After extending offers to take portfolio headshots for dancers willing to share their stories, Soldi found willing participants at nearby Towson University. The dancers’ creative endeavors soon became the young photographer’s, as he set off with his camera to capture their vulnerabilities and fulfill his junior seminar project requirements.

Soldi met weekly with two to three dancers. Since he was initially an outsider, some requested another dancer be present during these sessions.

“Sometimes I’d tell them to dance for ten to fifteen minutes so they’d get really tired and then I’d tell them to stop. I’d shoot them right away when they were tired, breathing heavily or not entirely aware of how their body was looking.”

Other meetings involved discussions over coffee about body image and frustrations related to the perception that all dancers have eating disorders.

“They’d say, ‘We’re 18- and 20-year-old girls standing in our tights in a room made out of mirrors,’” Soldi explains. “So it’s not so much about eating as it is about the competition when a group of girls are looking at their own bodies and comparing them to each other’s bodies every day.”  

One of the dancers made a lasting impression on Soldi. By the age of 16, she’d fulfilled her dream of dancing professionally with the world- renowned Vienna Conservatory, but the physical demands became too much. She retired just three years later, before reaching her 20th birthday.

“She was sick and tired of people telling her she was fat and to work harder when in fact she was very skinny,” says Soldi. He illustrates her doleful journey with an image of her holding a picture of her former self, with the dress she no longer fits into hanging in a garment bag in the background.

“It’s the same process in photography, in that it’s not an easy ride to make a body of work,” Soldi adds. “Sometimes things are tough and you have to reinvent yourself. Sometimes you feel like quitting. There were certainly times during this project when I thought, What am I doing? I have to stop this and do something else.”

Despite his uncertainties, Soldi persevered.

His tenacity paid off when he was awarded a solo show at MICA’s Woodward Gallery, but even as he hung his work, Soldi could not yet breathe a sigh of relief. “I wasn’t all that sure that it was done and that I was happy with it,” he says. After gauging the crowd’s reaction, his feelings began to change. “I started to get compliments from my friends and random people who’d come to the opening. Only then did I feel like it was a success and that I could call it done.” Soldi relates his experience to that of the dancers.

“The story ended up being about this really hard journey that takes you to such a beautiful thing,” he sums up. “It was a really tough process that can be ugly at times, but once you’re done, you can see your work on the wall and it’s so worth it.”

Storytellers: Rafael Soldi

A student photographer transforms the unseen struggles of young dancers into a beautiful solo exhibit.

July 31, 2009

By Julie Gallagher


pdn/photos/stylus/87824-Raphael-Soldi-005.TIFF.jpg

Portraits of a Dancer: Rafael Soldi sought to portray the dancer as a person who chooses to dance, rather than as a person with an ability to move his or her body in ways that no one else can. "It is common to see photographs in which the dancer is objectified," he explains, "photos of a body and not of a person."



Rafael Soldi was grappling with his own creative conflict when the idea to document the dichotomy between an artist’s means and end sprang from an image captured by photographer Stefan Ruiz.

“I was coming from a place where I was really struggling with my work and I didn’t know where I was going or what I was doing,” says the Peruvian national as he looks back on the start of his junior year at the Maryland Institute College of Art. That feeling was reflected in the subject of Ruiz’s image.

“It was a straightforward portrait of a female dancer, and she looked gorgeous, but there was something very telling about her eyes,” Soldi says. “It’s such a beautiful thing when dancers are gliding across the stage—it looks almost effortless—but the preparation for that one very beautiful performance is a very ugly one.”

After extending offers to take portfolio headshots for dancers willing to share their stories, Soldi found willing participants at nearby Towson University. The dancers’ creative endeavors soon became the young photographer’s, as he set off with his camera to capture their vulnerabilities and fulfill his junior seminar project requirements.

Soldi met weekly with two to three dancers. Since he was initially an outsider, some requested another dancer be present during these sessions.

“Sometimes I’d tell them to dance for ten to fifteen minutes so they’d get really tired and then I’d tell them to stop. I’d shoot them right away when they were tired, breathing heavily or not entirely aware of how their body was looking.”

Other meetings involved discussions over coffee about body image and frustrations related to the perception that all dancers have eating disorders.

“They’d say, ‘We’re 18- and 20-year-old girls standing in our tights in a room made out of mirrors,’” Soldi explains. “So it’s not so much about eating as it is about the competition when a group of girls are looking at their own bodies and comparing them to each other’s bodies every day.”  

One of the dancers made a lasting impression on Soldi. By the age of 16, she’d fulfilled her dream of dancing professionally with the world- renowned Vienna Conservatory, but the physical demands became too much. She retired just three years later, before reaching her 20th birthday.

“She was sick and tired of people telling her she was fat and to work harder when in fact she was very skinny,” says Soldi. He illustrates her doleful journey with an image of her holding a picture of her former self, with the dress she no longer fits into hanging in a garment bag in the background.

“It’s the same process in photography, in that it’s not an easy ride to make a body of work,” Soldi adds. “Sometimes things are tough and you have to reinvent yourself. Sometimes you feel like quitting. There were certainly times during this project when I thought, What am I doing? I have to stop this and do something else.”

Despite his uncertainties, Soldi persevered.

His tenacity paid off when he was awarded a solo show at MICA’s Woodward Gallery, but even as he hung his work, Soldi could not yet breathe a sigh of relief. “I wasn’t all that sure that it was done and that I was happy with it,” he says. After gauging the crowd’s reaction, his feelings began to change. “I started to get compliments from my friends and random people who’d come to the opening. Only then did I feel like it was a success and that I could call it done.” Soldi relates his experience to that of the dancers.

“The story ended up being about this really hard journey that takes you to such a beautiful thing,” he sums up. “It was a really tough process that can be ugly at times, but once you’re done, you can see your work on the wall and it’s so worth it.”
Add a Comment
* Required field
* Name:
* Comment:
 

More Storytellers »

ADVERTISEMENT







ADVERTISEMENT



Olympus VisionAge: New Day, New ChallengesOlympus VisionAge: New Day, New Challenges


Associated Press freelance photographer Chuck France never knows what the day will bring. The lifestyle, and his Olympus cameras, keep his creative juices flowing. More »

Subscribe to the Olympus VisionAge Newsletter!


Subscribe | Read Current Newsletter

More »

Win an Olympus E-620! Cameras Awarded Every 2 Months


Enter the VisionAge Contest and win an Olympus E-620 DSLR Camera!

More »

ADVERTISEMENT


Classified

ADVERTISEMENT




Photo © Pier Nicola D'Amico

PDN / Billboard Year In Music Moment Winners Gallery

We proudly present the winners of the first Year In Music Moment photo contest presented by Photo District News and Billboard.

Photo © Brigitte Lacombe

PDN Faces 2009 Winners Gallery

PDN Presents the Winners of our Second Annual Faces Contest.

Photo © Todd Antony

The Great Outdoors 2009 Winners Gallery

PDN Presents the Winners of the 2009 Great Outdoors photography contest.

Clockwise from top left: © Tadd Myers; © Matt Barnes; © Sylvain Dumais; © Marianne Campbell Associates / photo by Matthew Turley; © Robert Hooman; © Kwaku Alston

PDN Photographers' Self-Promo Awards 2009 Winners Gallery

We proudly present the winners of the 25th annual PDN Self-Promo Awards.

Photo © Matthew Jordan Smith

Emerging Photographer

The Resource for Professional Image Makers of Tomorrow.

Contact PDN | About Photo District News | Camera Reviews and Gear Guide | Photography Blog | Photo News | Photo Magazine- Print Subscription |
Photography RSS Resources | Free Photography Newsletter | Photo Magazine Advertising | Video Gallery | Photographer Features & Resources | Stock Photographs
© 2009 Nielsen Business Media All rights reserved. Read our PRIVACY POLICY