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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 2
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- In a sense, William Coupon is two different photographers.
- The first works in the world of mainstream commercial photography,
- shooting everything from advertising campaigns for clients such
- as Nike and Dewar's Scotch to magazine covers, including
- portraits of Robert Bork, Pat Robertson and Presidents Nixon,
- Reagan and Bush for TIME. The other William Coupon is endlessly
- fascinated with ethnic groups whose cultures are as far from the
- mainstream as they can be. He has traveled to record dramatic
- images of Norwegian Lapps, Australian Aborigines, Tarahumara
- Indians in Mexico and members of a dozen other groups.
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- With a resume like that, he was a natural choice to take
- the photographs for this week's cover story on vanishing
- cultures, which was conceived, reported and written by senior
- writer Eugene Linden. Says deputy art director Arthur Hochstein:
- "We knew right away that this was a perfect assignment for
- William." It was also a logistical nightmare. In a little more
- than six weeks, Coupon and an assistant had to travel to Alaska,
- Mexico, Borneo, Papua New Guinea and the Central African
- Republic, lugging camera equipment and a studio backdrop into
- various rain forests and wildernesses. In each place William had
- to locate his subjects, win their trust and take their pictures,
- all on a tight time schedule. Along the way he was robbed in New
- Guinea, and his assistant came down with a bad case of malaria.
- But the experience was worth it. Says Coupon: "It was the most
- amazing trip I've ever been on. I really feel as though I'm
- being a witness to these people and to the danger they're in."
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- William began his love affair with ethnic subgroups 10
- years ago, when despite a total lack of training in photography,
- he picked up a camera and plunged in, beginning what he calls
- his Social Studies series with Turkey's Kurds. He quickly
- developed a characteristic technique, which he has used with
- everyone from Native Americans to American Presidents: he takes
- subjects out of their surroundings and photographs them against
- a canvas backdrop. Hochstein thinks there is a happy paradox
- here: "The sameness of the background emphasizes the
- personalities of the people." That is clear in the pictures for
- this week's cover story; no one who sees them will easily forget
- Coupon's subjects, even if their cultures vanish forever.
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