Sweat: An Image Gallery

Photographer B.A. Van Sise brings us a new installment of his series Sweat. In his before-and-after portraits, we get a dramatic glimpse of the emotional life of players from the Metropolitan Riveters as well as a few featured professional bull riders and wrestlers.

For the last few months, I’ve been photographing athletes from a wide variety of sports as they arrive at their respective arenas and then, again, mere seconds after they come off the playing field.

The big thing I’ve learned: Some athletes like to sweat. And some athletes need to cry.

I’m not a sports analyst, a sports reporter, a sports scientist, a sports doctor, or even, really, a sports fan—and can offer little more than anecdata from my time getting to meet, however briefly, athletes from so many different stripes. Time and time again, it’s become obvious that the most striking differences from one sport to the next come down to what writer Charles Portis referred to as “true grit” in his novel of the same name.

The differences are large, and it’s hard not to notice that the more physical the sport, the better the athletes take their pratfalls in stride. Shooting roller derby ‘girls’ a few months ago, several of the competitors apologized—one of them profusely—because, after a couple hours getting knocked around, they’d forgotten my shoot and wiped the blood off their faces on their way off the track. A professional wrestler, screaming in pain from the capsaicin in his eyes after a stunt went wrong, stopped while having his face doused with milk to consider his sense of professionalism. “Wait, I need to get my photo taken,” he declared, half-and-half running down his cheeks. “Fuck it, let’s do it.” Meanwhile, the professional baseball players photographed during spring training, after three largely inert hours standing out in a field, demanded that a stylist redo their coiffures before being photographed, and most of the dozen professional bull riders I photographed—whose entire event consists of eight very tough seconds of activity—refused their ‘after’ image, because they were concerned how they’d look, visibly crying after falling off cattle.

The inverse relationship extends, it seems, to courtesy as well. While shooting Knicks basketball players—a couple dozen guys, any one of whom could have thrown my six foot, two hundred pound body like a rag doll—it was hard not to be encouraged seeing each and every player, many of them seemingly drenched skin, bone and marrow with sweat, strain themselves through their panting breath to be courteous to my assistant.  In contrast, the bull riders—their every hair, hat, and buckle as firmly in place as when they’d gone out to ride a few seconds earlier—threw chairs backstage, and repeatedly asked the league’s PR rep what they could do to get out of meeting fans after the event. The very next day I photographed the Metropolitan Riveters—the National Women’s Hockey League team roughly affiliated with the New Jersey Devils—and the two dozen ladies of that team marched off the ice, looking more disheveled than any other athletes I’d seen in this series—and politely asked to move quickly—as a hundred little girls who’d attended the game were waiting patiently in the arena lobby to meet them and get their autographs, which was as clear to them, as to me, a far greater priority.

What does this all mean? My sampling size is small, and even if it weren’t . . . well, Socrates, himself a great fan of the sports of his day, once declared that “the only thing I know, is that I know nothing.”

In my last installment of this series for PEM, I suggested that I misnamed the project. Perhaps I was right. Some athletes perspire. Some athletes cry. Some do both. Maybe the work might better have been called, simply, Salt Water.

Rebecca Russo // Metropolitan Riveters

 

Erika Lawler // Metropolitan Riveters

 

Harrison Browne // Metropolitan Riveters

 

Tatiana Rafter // Metropolitan Riveters

 

Kiira Dosdall // Metropolitan Riveters

 

J.B. Mauney // Professional Bull Riders

 

Silvano Alves // Professional Bull Riders

 

Flint Rasmussen // Professional Bull Riders

 

“Logan Black” // Professional wrestler

 

“Eddie Machete” // Professional wrestler

 

“Nyla Rose” // Professional wrestler

 

“Jason Sinclair” // Professional wrestler

 

Missed part 1 of B.A. Van Sise’s Sweat series? Check it out here.

Sweat: An Image Gallery

Photographer B.A. Van Sise brings us the before and after of sport in his series Sweat. With these double portraits, he offers a close look at the drive of players from the Knicks to the Gotham Girls Roller Derby League.

 

Well, for starters, I don’t like sports.

I played baseball as a kid, if one can call what I did “playing.” Mostly, I stood out in the outfield and held my glove in the air and prayed to the love that moves the sun and all the other stars that nobody would ever hit the ball in my direction, which invariably everybody did. If such a thing is possible, I’m pretty sure I would have had a negative batting average and my teammates—a group of post-pubescent murderers who all hated my tiny, non-hitting, non-catching, non-running body—would clearly have preferred to use me as a backstop.

I’d return home from my games, open the hamper, toss in my uniform covered in tears and goose shit, and listen to Edith Piaf music.

It’s a shock I never made the majors.

Years later, while working my first big newspaper job at Newsday, the sports editor would be forced—when the rest of the staff was sick, vacationing or dead—to send me to photograph sporting events. I have a deep-seated admiration for sports shooters; I know a lot of them, and am constantly dazzled by their work. Sports work is the hardest kind there is for a photographer, and not the kind for me. I’d spend a couple bored hours taking pictures of where the ball or puck was or wasn’t, hand in the work with my fingers crossed, and go home, open the hamper, throw in a button-down shirt covered in tears and goose shit, and listen to John Coltrane.

Last year, a buddy of mine convinced me to go see a New York Cosmos soccer game with him. He was a leader for the group of Cosmos hooligan fans who attend every game, and he told me that I should come down, if only to yell at strangers for ninety minutes. As a good and loyal New Yorker, it’s hard to pass up the opportunity to fight with strangers for hours, so off I went—and I was marveled.

The players on the field never stopped moving. They ran and slid and fought and looked like men who’ve been through a war. When they lost, I imagined their homes, their hampers, their jerseys, and their bachata music.

So that’s how it began. Since then, I’ve been visiting with athletes of every stripe to try—situation and weather allowing—to photograph them identically: first, arriving to an event, and later walking off the field just seconds after they win, lose, or quit for the day. The personalities, I’ve noticed, vary in culture from one sport to next, but one thing pervades the lot of them: a desire to prove themselves. To go faster. To work harder. To do more. At a certain level, every sport seems to turn into a game of inches, and all of those who most impressed, it seems, were still thinking about much greater distances.

I called it Sweat, because I was pretty sure the Peabody Essex Museum wouldn’t let me name it, well, Goose Shit.

 

B.A. Van Sise, Sweat
Danny Szetela // New York Cosmos

 

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Adam Moffat // New York Cosmos

 

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Ruben Bover // New York Cosmos

 

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“Kate Sera Sera” // Gotham Girls Roller Derby League

 

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“Northern Fights” // Gotham Girls Roller Derby League

 

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“Lumiknoxity” // Gotham Girls Roller Derby League

 

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“Kid Vicious” // Gotham Girls Roller Derby League

 

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BackAlley Dred // Gotham Girls Roller Derby League

 

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Buay Tuach // Knicks

 

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Hanner Mosquera-Perea // Knicks

 

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Luke Kornet // Knicks

 

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Xavier Rathan-Mayes // Knicks

 

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Leon Gray // New York City Marathon

 

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Matt Schaar // New York City Marathon

 

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Sami Yewman // New York City Marathon

 

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Jennifer Piazza // New York City Marathon

Check out more from B.A. Van Sise’s Sweat series.

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