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Posted on Sun, Jan. 22, 2012 08:05 PM
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WE’D LIKE YOU TO MEET … OSCAR PEDROZA

Photographer finds a niche documenting quinceaneras

Updated: 2012-01-23T02:05:45Z

Photographer Oscar Pedroza captures the Hispanic community through his images of quinceaneras, the celebration of a girl’s 15th birthday and transition from childhood to adulthood.
Allison Long
Photographer Oscar Pedroza captures the Hispanic community through his images of quinceaneras, the celebration of a girl’s 15th birthday and transition from childhood to adulthood.

Meet Oscar

• What: Quinceanera expo, sponsored by B15 magazine

• When: Noon to 5 p.m. March 25

• Where: Holiday Inn Olathe, 101 W. 151st St.

• Details: 913-829-4000

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Each week in “We’d like you to meet …” we’ll profile a local person doing interesting things. If you have a special someone in mind, send a note to starfyi@gmail.com.

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Parents shopping for a quinceanera photographer used to walk into Oscar Pedroza’s studio and ask: What kind of backdrops do you have?

They were used to a certain look. The teenager in her fancy gown posed in front of faux scenery. Fake forests. Fake castles. Fake oceans.

That’s just not Pedroza’s style. The professional photographer, who also does weddings, has set out to change the look of quinceanera photography in Kansas City, one keepsake portrait at a time.

“I’ve been working really hard to make a difference,” says Pedroza, who runs Oscar Pedroza Studios (named Small Business of the Year in 2011 by the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of Greater Kansas City) out of a small office in Mission.

He photographs quince girls on location. In Loose Park. On the steps and lawn of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. Among the flowers and fountains at Kauffman Memorial Garden. On the Country Club Plaza (very quickly, before security rushes them along). On downtown streets.

Last year he began publishing a magazine in Spanish devoted to this rite of passage for 15-year-old girls, choosing one local teen each month to grace the cover. Being the cover girl for B15 magazine instantly became a must-have privilege.

Q.Q. How did you get interested in photography?

A. A. My high school teacher (at Shawnee Mission West) told me “You know you have a future in photography. You should pursue it.” He would give us assignments on different topics, and one of them was eggs — just create something with eggs. The Society for Contemporary Photography in Kansas City has an annual show … and I won three gold medals that year.

So my teacher talked to the people at Highland (Community College in Highland, Kan.), and they gave me a two-year scholarship.

Q.What did you do after Highland?

A.I was hired by J.C. Penney doing advertising. … Then I started doing graphic design. … We were doing 25, 26 stores throughout the country, doing the advertising for all of them. Then I worked for a couple of other companies doing photography, advertising. Eventually I went to Chicago, where I got my bachelor of fine arts (from Columbia College) with an emphasis in photography. … And then we moved back to Kansas City, and I started my own photography studio.

Q.Had you shot quinceaneras before?

A.Never. Never! (He laughs.)

Q.So it was a whole new world?

A.For about a year I didn’t have enough business because everybody wanted to have a photo and video; they didn’t want just pictures. Latinos, they love to see the party, and they get together on the weekends and they watch the video.

So then I decided, OK, if I’m going to do photography and I want to get into quinceaneras, I better purchase a digital camcorder. Eventually I hired my assistant … and everything just blossomed.

Q.How many quinceaneras do you do a year? Is there a season?

A.Everything sort of starts early April, and then it goes on sometimes even as late as December. Right now we have about 25 events booked already for the year, and we’re getting more as we go.

Q.How do you market yourself?

A.Facebook has been very valuable, and the magazine definitely. That has really put a face on the work that I do. Because before, it was all about the price, not necessarily the quality of the photography.

I think I might be the only Latino doing what I do (in Kansas City) with a bachelor of fine arts with an emphasis in photography. Q.Let’s talk about the dresses. Where do the girls get these big gowns?

A.There are different stores here in Kansas City. Like, for instance, there’s a store called La Fiesta de tu Suenos. … It’s on Truman Road. It used to be that the quinceanera dress was white, which signified purity. I think because of popular shows on MTV they started doing colorful dresses. That’s sort of where everything just kind of turned into a fashion show for quinceaneras.

Q.How much are families spending on quinceaneras?

A.Depending on where they do the event, it could run them anywhere from $5,000 to $10,000.

Q.Are you constantly scoping out locations for shoots?

A.You know, one of the things that I also really wanted to get away from was, I hate to say this, the cheesy photography that I was seeing. Like the girl inside of a glass; they would put her face inside of a glass, with a rose. That was more ’80s. … People would say, “How many backgrounds do you have?” I would say, “I have Kansas City as my background.”

Q.How important is it to you that you are working with Latinos?

A.I think that’s really important. I’m bilingual. My assistant is bilingual. And when we go to events, we can talk to everyone and really understand not only the American culture but the Latino culture, and for me that’s a big advantage.

I love the American culture, and I love everything the U.S. has offered — the opportunities that I have had personally. But I also think that part of my culture is still there, it’s still vibrant, and so I still want to share it with people. I mean, it’s who I am.

To reach Lisa Gutierrez, call 816-234-4987 or send email to lgutierrez@kcstar.com.

Posted on Sun, Jan. 22, 2012 08:05 PM
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