
‘Celebrating women, femininity and honoring who we are’ has been the central theme of photographer Gayle Goodrich’s work. Goodrich recently relocated from Manhattan Beach to Pacific Palisades, where her Haverford home also doubles as a studio. The small room, where Goodrich keeps a variety of fabrics, lighting equipment and a fan for her portrait work, has several windows while remaining private and tucked away. ‘It’s the first studio space I’ve had where I could also use natural light,’ says Goodrich, who has been a professional photographer for 17 years and a fine art photographer since 2000. After studying with portrait photographer Joyce Tenneson in 2002, she has been photographing fine art nudes in addition to her work with corporations, families, children, engaged couples, weddings, and pregnancy portraits. Goodrich’s interest in photography began in 1974 in Jakarta, Indonesia, where she was living with her first husband. While he worked 12-hour days at his import/export business, Goodrich, who has a B.A. from USC in French and Russian, found herself writing friends and family 15-page letters accompanied by photos of the country. ‘People would write me back, and say ‘Your photos are so beautiful,” she recalls. After moving back to California, Goodrich became the family documentarian, continuing her photography as an avocation’photographing weddings, babies and family events. In 1983 she married her second husband, and soon had a tubal pregnancy. Four years later, a second tubal pregnancy, in which she had to get emergency medical care after the tube burst, left her in a deep depression. ‘To help me heal, my husband built me a darkroom at home, something to take my mind off it,’ she recalls. After a long, frustrating day in the darkroom trying to make negatives, ‘I realized I needed schooling.’ She learned about the N.Y. Institute of Photography in a photography magazine, and signed up for the school’s correspondence course, taught by professional photographers. Goodrich would shoot her assignments, and send in prints with written essays. ‘The teachers would critique it on audiotape. ‘The feedback was tremendous. They would say, ‘I see what you’re trying to do here, but try moving the camera a little bit lower and to the left.” When she started getting school assignments where she had to shoot body shots, she recruited subjects from her gym. Soon she began moving into paid photography, photographing dancers and head shots for child actors. In 1989, she began working with the owner of a South Bay lingerie shop. ‘She knew women’s bodies like you couldn’t believe,’ Goodrich says. For Valentine’s Day, she offered boudoir photography. ‘I really learned a lot from her, about a different type of photography’dreamy, romantic, artsy, full-length poses.’ Her husband’s work then took them to the Boston area, where she set up a successful boudoir photography business, working out of her basement. She hired a makeup artist to do the women’s hair and makeup and provided feather boas to use as props. Women often used the resulting photos as a gift for a boyfriend or husband, such as one woman whose husband was a lobster fisherman, and who slipped the photos into his bag when he was leaving on a fishing trip. Goodrich says that after these photo sessions, the women ‘developed a confidence and appreciation of who they are, embracing their femininity as a whole. People said, ‘I feel so beautiful. I know my body is not perfect, but I have my own uniqueness, I love what I see.” Goodrich thinks of portrait photography as ‘a beautiful collaboration between two people. The direction of a session will totally depend on who is in front of the camera; it always takes on a life of its own.’ In 1994, she moved back to Manhattan Beach, where she set up a studio, ‘Images by Gayle,’ and began working on movie stills and doing a lot of beach portraits. Demi Moore’s pregnant portrait had come out the year before on the cover of Vanity Fair, and Goodrich began working with pregnant women, photographing them draped in fabric. She likes photographing women in their eighth month of pregnancy when the belly takes on a distinct shape, and encourages husbands to come and also be part of the photo. As with all her portraits, she tries to incorporate aspects of the couple’s story into the photo. She also does contemporary boudoir portraits, using a variety of sheer fabrics, such as cheesecloth and chiffon, draped over partially nude women. One of the things she loves about portrait photography is following a family through the years, shooting their engagement, wedding, pregnancy and shots of their children. ‘It’s great to see people grow and change.’ Goodrich’s rates vary, but they generally start at $350 for a roll of 36 pictures or $350 an hour for weddings and events. Goodrich uses a film camera, and often photographs people at the beach or other outdoor locations. To help her clients feel comfortable, Goodrich talks to them throughout the session, using a sense of humor. ‘I try to keep them in the moment and myself in the moment. I’ll set something up and get the shoot started, and then stuff happens.’ For example, on one photo shoot of a couple and their one-year-old child, she noticed and captured the interplay of the family’s three pairs of barefoot feet on the sand. Between commercial jobs, Goodrich works on her own photography. After going through a divorce in 2000, she says, ‘I began taking more risks in my work, as a reflection of my independence.’ Now having built a body of work, which she describes as ‘unusual juxtapositions of the body with outdoor environments, celebrating different parts of the body, and having fun with the body,’ she hopes her next step will be a book of her photos. Goodrich can be reached at 230-8388. Her online portfolios can be viewed at www.gaylegoodrichphoto.com or www.gaylegoodrichfineart.com.
 
			