Friday, August 22, 2008

Car Yard Series

This was a photo series I put together in a photo class at uni, it explores the human traces left behind in a car yard. I focused on the traces that contrast with the polished presentation of the showroom - the smiley face on the white board, oil stains on the pavement and the wilting pot plants relegated to the empty car park.

caryard1

caryard2

caryard3

caryard4

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caryard6

Friday, August 15, 2008

Nostalgia/Mi Querido Mexico

I spent last year living/studying/traveling in Mexico, and while I love Australia, Mexico also has a good chunk of my heart. I'm not quite sure what it is, but the people, the culture and the music mystified me and I really miss it. Lo extrano tanto.
At the moment I've been listening to some Mexican and Latin American music by Manu Chao and a little band from Mexico called Sonex who I saw perform live in a sweaty little bar in Xalapa - I dare say it was the BEST gig I have ever seen, lightshows and musical genius will never compare to being completely passionate in the music you are performing and passionate about your culture, your stories and your history. I can't help but be transported back to specific times and places in Mexico when I hear certain songs.

Since I'm on this little nostalgia kick, I thought I would post a photo from Mexico, and then looking back over them all, I decided that I cannot narrow it down to less than six (and that is being brutal about my choices).

donkeys in the Xalapa countryside
This was the first photo I remember taking both in Mexico and on my then-new Film SLR camera. I wasn't even sure how to use it properly, i remember barely checking the exposure or the focus and just clicking away, afraid of missing an opportunity. This photo is so typically Mexican, I mean its got a bunch of donkeys in it for crying out loud!

hostel
This was the first photo I printed in my first photography class, it was pretty exciting. I'm obsessed with lines and perspective. It's of a hostel we stayed in called La Giraffa Hostel, it had bed bugs.

our sink
One of the first photos I took again, this is a Mexican sink. I never quite found out what the stick broom thing is for, but its where we washed our clothes by hand (only the ones you were afraid the laundromat might shrink).

the road to Xico
This is one of my favourites, it's the cobblestone road to Xico (Hee-Co), a small town outside of Xalapa where there are some beautiful waterfalls. I remember my legs were eaten alive by bugs and the bites scarred for months, we were driven back to town by an eleven-year-old.

jalcomulco
This was taken in another nearby small town called Jalcomulco, where there are people who can turn into animals - they're called Nahuales. We spent the day drinking beer and I kissed a boy while we were sitting on rocks in the middle of a river - which was romantic except for the old man bathing a donkey nearby.

Isla Mujeres Cantina
This graffiti was on the side of a little Mexican bar, a Cantina on a little island surrounded by Carribbean waters. Only Mexican men really drank there, and the graffiti says "With my solitude, I will die". I think this photo works better in colour (i have a colour copy, the wall is white with red and yellow lines) but this graffiti really affected me when I first read it, and still does.

So I'm done with the nostalgia, for now.

In other news, I'm starting a new job soon at a certain Government Funded Media Agency doing transcription for radio and television. Just thought you might like to know that your tax payer dollars are going to a good cause i.e. me.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Read this book if you want to know nothing about everything.

psychic

The Psychic Soviet - Ian F. Svenonius

This little pink book fits perfectly in my hand bag and the chapters are short enough to read on train or bus trips or when your waiting around.
Its funny, and full of crack conspiracy theories about everything from the fall of the former soviet union to vampirism and rock and roll.

Things I learned from the Psychic Soviet:
1. We take more antidepressants due to an imbalance in psychological geopolitics after the fall of the soviet union - also known as "post-soviet depression"
2. Bram Stokers Dracula addresses the genetic concerns of Europes upper classes - the quest for genetic purity.
3. All cultures engage in Vampirism by adopting the preferred beverage of the conquered nation i.e. Beer after the fall of Germany in WWII, vodka after Russia and Coffee as we subjugate the third world.
4. Sympathy for the Devil by the Rolling Stones and Back in the USSR by the Beatles reflect intra-commie conflict. Sypathy being Maoist and USSR being Soviet based. Also, when asked "can you guess my name" in Sympathy, the name is in fact not "The Devil" but "Historical Materialism".
5. The rock and roll fable of Dylan going electric represented the struggle between market forces and Communist egalitarianism.
6. Lord of the Rings is the woman haters bible - the evil ring that rules them all represents the vagina.

and more
but forgive me if i am a little confused about them