The Persistent Image
About the Artist
Pamela Gentile likes to work in the dark.
The first film she ever processed was 16 mm, meant for movies, her first love and the profession she trained for. She found she always shot stills on everyone else’s movies though.
Shooting the local music scene in San Francisco she got an assignment to go on tour with Chris Isaak where she focused on story. Her interest in stories brought her to SF Weekly where as photojournalist and photo editor she shot photo stories for ten years processing her own film and making prints in her darkroom.
Gentile kept her focus on her first love, the world of cinema.
Her archive is now thirty plus. Her subject matter, backstage, on stage, the red carpet, the marquee, the audience, screenings, and odd moments in between, is captured cinematically in an atmospheric visual narrative. Her portraits of filmmakers, actors and musicians shot simply and candidly, often in a makeshift backstage studio, form a historical record of influential figures in World Cinema. Her most recent capture of screens preserves movies in movie theaters which is fast becoming an endangered species.
As a former film studies major, Gentile brings an insider’s eye to her ongoing documentation of the SFIFF. Beginning in the mid-1980s, Gentile has built an extensive photographic archive of the film industry, documenting its festivals and faces with a distinct and informed style. Her close relationship with the subject and passion for the cinema reveals itself in photographs that embrace an aesthetic informed by the industry itself: “I wanted to photograph the festival in the way that I saw cinema,” Gentile explains. Working quickly in low light conditions with a handheld camera, Gentile moves through the crowd, rendering the event and its participants in a graphic style that visually blurs the line between the festival at hand and the cinema it celebrates.