Photographer Eric Ilasenko has had an intimate association with the art of
dance since he was first born...
Eric's parents were both pro dancers (one a teacher and
performer, the other a competitive dancer) who met and fell in love around a
dance floor. Although they stopped competing and teaching, they never
stopped dancing and both continued to dance actively socially and also
performed in exhibitions and shows on occasion. Later, they ran a successful
mail order dance boutique (Kimena's
Boutique) which was a family business where young Eric would be
traveling the Midwest and East Coast almost every weekend to major dance
workshops, helping his parents who were vendors selling their wares.
As a budding shutterbug, Eric soon turned his camera lens
to an obvious and convenient subject near and dear to his heart, the
dancers performing in the big evening shows that followed the dance workshops. He began
selling prints to these dancers with great success. Soon, his flattering and
artistic dance action photography became a favorite among performing dancers
who would anxiously line up at his parents Dance Boutique display tables to
view past albums of onstage performances and place orders for prints of themselves.
In all, Eric took more than 10,000 photographs of dance performances over a
5 year period.
His first magazine photo was published in a dance
publication when he was only 13 years old, and he continued to photograph
dancers as often as possible as he got older despite his photographic career
taking him in many new directions. At 14, he landed his first job as a photographer for a
Detroit area portrait photo studio. By 15, he was a regular contributing photographer
to a major metropolitan weekly newspaper with a circulation of over 50,000
readers, where he regularly produced full page feature stories on a wide
variety of subjects including concerts and events. He was the youngest
officially NASA accredited member of the
working press who covered the very first launch of the Space Shuttle
Columbia, where he hitchhiked with other photographers from the main security
gate to the secure press area because he did not even have a drivers license yet!
After graduation, he took a job with a major department store photography
company where he drove over 50,000 miles in one year doing portraits of
babies, children and families in stores all over Michigan, Ohio, and
Indiana. On weekends home, he was also a freelance "stringer" for a national
portrait/yearbook company and covered high school sports, events, and dances
for them.
Eric also began doing a lot of other magazine freelance
assignment photography, and eventually ended up doing work for publications
around the world which was distributed by the international stock photo news agency
Gamma-Liaison for nearly a decade.
He worked in the photo department at a major utility
company for several years where he was exposed to lots of interesting
corporate and industrial photography, publicity, public relations, executive portrait, and
helicopter aerial assignments. He still loves to hang out of choppers to
this day!
When he moved to Florida in 1990, he worked in the school picture business
as senior photographer with one of the leading school photo companies at the time and
traveled to schools from Flagler to Manatee counties daily, shooting as many
as 400 underclass kids each working weekday, and on weekends he would also
shoot Proms, Dances, Dance Schools, or Sports.
After moving to Florida, he also got his first pet
parrot, and his photo career was never the same as Eric soon began
photographing for pet magazines, calendars, and book publishers. Today, he supplies
major publishers worldwide with animal images that are
seen in print regularly. He also developed a line of products that feature
his pet photography including computer screen savers, mousepads, mugs and
more that he markets to pet lovers in stores and online.
In the late 90's, Eric operated a retail and commercial photo studio in
Longwood, Florida, near Orlando, until he closed it after moving to the
Daytona Beach area where he and his wife Martha now reside in Ormond Beach. Since
closing his Orlando area studio and moving to the Daytona Beach area, he is still looking for
the perfect location to open another full time studio, and hopes to do so in
the coming year. Until the new studio is completed, his photography services
are available on location for a wide variety of assignments and clients in
the Central Florida area including Dance Studios, Schools, Sports, and
Events.
Eric has continued to always photograph a few select dance
studios each and every year, as it keeps him connected with the roots of his
photography career, and he greatly enjoys the creative challenge as well as
the fun of interacting with enthusiastic dancers and teachers who share a
common love of the art of dance and performing.