
The Lightning Catchers is a photograph by Bryan Allen which was uploaded on March 14th, 2014.
The Lightning Catchers

by Bryan Allen
Title
The Lightning Catchers
Artist
Bryan Allen
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
Much of the magic of this image for me is the people in it and my history with them. As a kid growing up on a quiet suburban street in the late 60's, I knew most of the neighbors and the man in the foreground, Mr. Bronson, was a one. My friends and I thought of him as a bit of a wizard. He had all this unusual electrical equipment in his house, had several patents, and talked of strange secret projects he had worked on in the past, some military, some not. He could build a keyboard organ from just boxes of parts with no plans. He had spent time as a photographer back when 8x10 cameras were the norm. He was able to grind his own lenses from blanks of glass and even built 6 leaf irises from thin sheets of metal. Of extra interest to the neighborhood kids was a massive stereo system he built all from parts wired to dozens of large speakers juiced with enough wattage to rattle your teeth out and make your scalp tingle. Ironically, my very first introduction to him was when I threw a snowball at his house and dented the aluminum siding. He was none too pleased. Of course that was before I knew what a treasure he was, long before.
This image was made a long while ago in 1995. I used what was then the latest version of Photoshop - 3.0 - which was the first to introduce Layers! There were precious few filters then, certainly no AI, and I didn't want to use anything like that anyway, preferring everything to be 'hand done' so to speak. For example, Walt was instrumental in helping me put lightning in a jar. I came to him when I was struggling with a way to capture electricity on film. He lent me this odd-looking vintage tool that looked like an old bakelite flashlight with a big 3 inch metal bee stinger where the lens would have been and wire and plug on the other. He said it was used for testing neon signs for leaks. I was able to contact-expose electricity in the darkroom by pressing wrinkled foil against raw film and zapping the length of the foil with the tool. Anyway, he was a character and was perfect for the role of Lightning Catcher despite being 92 at the time. He was part Iroquois Indian, which gave him something of a regal look.
The gal in the pic is not Walt's wife. She was the local historian in the town library of Boonton, NJ, above which I once had my photo studio. I did not know her as well as Walt but she was a wonderful person and very enthusiastic about being in the image. Both of them have since passed away and each had the print displayed at their service.
Again, please excuse the watermark. It won't appear on your poster. Stealing this picture had become sport for many. Illegal copies have appeared on no less than a bootleg Pink Floyd CD and even an FBI web page. Go figure. Does one sue the FBI or just smile and move on?
Uploaded
March 14th, 2014
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Comments (512)

Nona Embry
I contacted the magazine & got a photo copy of this when I saw it MANY years ago. The woman reminded me of my Grandmother (she had beautiful blue eyes), but my own granddaughter liked it so much she has it now!
Bryan Allen replied:
Thank you Nona. As a shameless plug, I would encourage you the get a real copy here in leu of that old photo copy. Support the arts!! :-)

Luke George
This is an Amazing Image Bryan, WoW! This will get a Favorite Point in my book. Congrats, on your sale, and keep up the creativity!

Bob Christopher
Hi Bryan …I like your image….Actually, this is one of my favorite photographs of all time. Superb work …Cheers Bob fv

Myrna Walsh
I have said so before but want to say it again...I love this! It is beautifully done and so very creative.