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Two Weeks Ago I Went Hiking With Friends At Mt. Kirishima (), A Mountain Range In Southern Kyushu. During









Two weeks ago I went hiking with friends at Mt. Kirishima (霧島山), a mountain range in southern Kyushu. During the hike, my camera fell and opened, exposing all my shots of the elevated mountain lake and huge crater we'd hiked to. Despite that, I'm happy with what survived. I'm really enjoying the Minolta since switching to Lomography film.
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gr8-forestspirits liked this · 11 years ago
More Posts from Zacharytrebellas
The second piece in a new photo series I’m doing on group identity. More info at the project site.


A business card I whipped up for an international festival I'm presenting at at this weekend.
The sixth piece in a new photo series I’m doing on group identity.
More info at the project site.

Instead of "hipster" say:
Alt - Alternative lifestyles, fashion, hobbies -- that's what we're talking about right? It's an easy, catchall word for describing all sorts of activities and styles (see below). Let's call a spade a spade already.
Bohemian - For over 200 years, artists, musicians, writers, etc. have lived in concentrated areas embracing creative, independent culture and sacrificing for their art. Labels have changed, but the passion's the same. Maker - Picklers, crafters, tinkerers, these people are leading a new American industrial revolution called the Maker Movement (look it up. It's awesome). Freegan - Anti-consumers who salvage and repurpose mass society's waste. They embrace "community, generosity, social concern, freedom, cooperation, and sharing". How wonderful is that?
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Asshole - We don't need an h' word that awkwardly lumps in alt types with douches and snobs. If you have to say you don't like someone, we already have more than enough words to choose from.
Skilling
I can't remember where the thought first came from exactly, but while biking in January, I decided that it'd be a good idea to level up artistically in 2014. I've always had sort of an odd relationship with my own skills as an artist. After all, I studied art history, not fine art, and only had time for two art classes in college, Drawing I at NCC and 2D Design at Columbia. Of course, in high school I took every art class available to me. Then during college I started to design flyers and posters for clubs and parties and after graduating, did the same as the in-department designer at Marwen. At the same time, I started making artwork during my senior year in college and haven't stopped.
But during this whole time I've remained untrained. Besides what I was taught in school, I learned everything through experimentation, especially when it came to using Photoshop and Illustrator. In my art practice I've made pieces which were visually easy to execute, mainly relying on printing, stenciling, and photography. Because my training is in knowledge and ideas (art history), I've always felt confident when it comes to the conceptual side of making art. And so I always work concept → visual. But lately I feel like if I worked on the other side of the equation, the visual side, my thinking might in turn expand, and my overall work and projects would grow stronger. I'm interested in the idea of reversing my process: visual → concept. Or, rather, creating more of a back and forth flow between the two. There's a long history of works that are simple skills-wise but balance that with a strong concept (relying on the concept of the "deskilling" of art), and that's where I've fit in so far. But I'm interested in expanding from that. I'm feeling more and more like I have a visual side inside of me that I want to break open, explore, get to know. I remember a boy named Darin in high school who was working on carving plaster during a foundations-level assignment. The teacher, walking around the room, turned to him and said, "It just makes sense to you, doesn't it?" I felt a little jealous of that, the feeling that he could just understand the material. And yet in my sophomore year of college when I was taking 2D Design, during the critique of my forth assignment, the professor said almost the same thing to me. I know that artists have different strengths, and I feel like what's always made sense to me has been composition. I understood the language of the design projects in that class because I took my composition ideas from photographs I'd taken, a suggestion that came from Miles. And the framing that's part of photography is something that's always made sense to me. Related to that, I've always felt little tugs towards collage, found objects, assembling, and scanning. I want to follow that inclination and see what I can discover about myself within it.
When I first started down this train of thought, I thought, "Do I have the time to explore all this? Is it really possible for me to reach a level of quality that I'll accept? Maybe I can only achieve a certain amateur level. That's how it is sometimes". I've always felt competent at things like design, but second-rate next to trained designers who've spent year honing their style and skill set. The more I think about all this though, the more excited and confident I become. Lately I feel like I do have it in me to become the kind of visual artist that I'd be satisfied with. I've already gotten started with Adobe tutorials and a new book of art assignments. I'm really excited to see where I can go from here.