Peter Kayafas is a photographer, publisher, curator and teacher who lives in New York City where he is the Director of the Eakins Press Foundation. His photographs have been widely exhibited, and are in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art; the Brooklyn Museum of Art; The New York Public Library; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; the New Orleans Museum of Art; and the DeCordova Museum, among others. He has taught photography at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn since 2000, and is the Vice Chairman of the Board of the Corporation of Yaddo. In addition to two other monographs (The Merry Cemetery of Sapanta and O Public Road! Photographs of America) his newest book Totems, with an essay by Jed Perl, is available from the Purple Martin Press. Today we look at his series, Coney Island Waterdance.
Coney Island Waterdance
“During my first visit to Coney Island, in the winter of 1990, I was standing on the boardwalk, bracing myself against the wind coming off the ocean, when a group of pink, half-naked men and women emerged from a cinder-block shed beneath my feet and made their barefoot way quickly across the snow-crusted sand toward the frigid ocean. After some jumping jacks, a bit of stretching, and a collective battle cry, they bounded into the water like lunatics out of the gate.
I guess I’d heard of the Polar Bear Club before, but their appearance in the flesh, at that moment, was a great surprise and delight. The next week, and each Sunday for the rest of that winter, I joined them with my waterproof Nikonos camera and a bathing suit. The club had been much photographed, but they told me that I was the first photographer to suit up and join them in the water. I soon had a lot of new friends, but also a real appreciation for what that insanely cold water actually does to the body. It’s true, as the Polar Bear Club claims, that the experience invigorates not just for the painful minutes while in the water, but for every day of the week to follow.
This experience is also how I fell in love with Coney Island. I’ve since photographed there regularly for two decades. The freak shows, the Mermaid Parade, the amusements, the boardwalk’s old bars and games, the crowds on the beach— all have been of great interest as subject matter to me. But, it is the people in the water, both in the winter and the summer, that have yielded the most satisfying photographs. I am mostly interested in the way people look when they don’t know they are being photographed.
The activity of being in the water, whether it is breathtakingly cold or welcome relief from summer heat, is both a distraction (good cover for a photographer) and a disinhibition, the combination of which makes for remarkably immediate, energized, and even intimate portraits. I keep my camera hidden underwater while I stalk around the crowds of people splashing, wrestling, or embracing; then, at the last moment, I pull the camera up to my eye to make the photograph. These images are, for me, like passages from some primal, beautiful ballet—the energy, gesture, and emotion of the narrative rising and falling with the subjects on the waves.”
To view more of Peter’s work, please visit his website.