Archive for the 'Photography' Category

Thanksgiving Road Trip With My Cat

Having mastered all the DIY pet-friendly travel methodologies pertinent to the Chinatown Express, United Airlines and the New York Subway system, my orange, tiger-striped tabby cat, Kee-hap and I are now Cali bound.

We are now driving those crazy-ass canyon zig-zag roads that wind through the rockies.  Occasionally I pull over to give Kee-hap some stretch time out of her carrying case (assuming Kee-hap Houdini hasn’t already taken the initiative on that one, herself) and water to drink (which she never does) and kitty treats (which she sometimes takes) before stepping out of the car myself, taking in the inky skies, dark enough to reveal galaxy clusters.

Listening to The Teaching Company’s Black Holes and Fall of the Roman Empire lectures on CD as I drive.  Had forgotten how much I love gunning the limits of time and space via the interstate.

Bookmark and Share

Delineator Dance

Snow-1-pola

Snow-pola

Snow-2-pola

Bookmark and Share

Why Googletrends Hates Screensavers and What the Declining Numbers Indicate You Might be Missing Out on

I asked my friend, Cathy, to tell me why Googletrends reports a steady drop in screensaver searches.  The decline dates from 2004 to the present.  Cathy,  a friend I’ve known since Hampshire College days,  is a Screensaver Auteur.

Idle Time Software

In 2008, Cathy’s company produced “Holding Pattern” a screensaver that simulates the experience of intermittently  gazing out of an airplane window and snoozing.  Apple praised  the work for its creativity and lauded Idle Time Software for its programming integrity.  Eventually David Byrne bought a copy from Cathy’s website and invited her collaborate with him on a photography project using the original software she developed to create Holding Pattern.

Cathy1
Cathy Creating Idletime’s Sunset 23
Photo by, Susanna Speier

Deluge of the Anti-gadget

The reason people hate screensavers, Cathy explained, is because skanky software scumbags load them with spyware, adware and viruses.  Screensavers –especially those free screensaver downloads people get online — are often the epitome of skank.

The Great Google Has Spoken

I went to GoogleAdWords to figure out what screensaver keywords have surged over the internet  last month.

1,220,000 users  trawled the internet using the word “screensaver” and the same number searched for the plural form.   “Free screensavers,” came in third, and “Halloween screensavers” was right after at 135,000.

There was no data available for look-ups of “search engine scam,” and fewer than 1,000 were savvy enough to specifically search  for “screensaver spyware.”  Legit as the fear of bogus downloads may be, the search patterns indicate that the fear is based more on conjecture than research and analyses.

Figuring Out Whether or Not Screensaver = Oxymoron

Cathy takes pride in Idle Time’s technical integrity.  She does not sell ad space or generate income through site referral, and she even posts a personal disclaimer officiating the fact she does that she does not add spyware.

And in case you’ve been wondering, the reason Cathy  could spend a year developing a technically, creatively and conceptually sophisticated screensaver  is revenue generated from the deluxe versions of her free software enables her to do so.  Cubicle Flood was therefore made possible by Holding Pattern’s success.

Despite Cathy’s disclaimers, getting people to trust a free screensaver  download  is increasingly challenging.  Could the Googletrends be winning?

Cubicle Flood - The Waters are Rising

The generic grey cubicle office where Cathy used to work inspired the brand new screensaver, “Cubicle Flood.” “It was an emotional response to the deadening work environment,” she says.  “You see a workspace that’s been generated for you by a Human Resources Department.”

Cathy’s Katrina survivor friends do not like the feeling that the  new screensaver evokes.  “Water is incredibly strong and it creeps in,” Cathy says.  The office depicted in Cubicle Flood, however, “isn’t affected the way a real space would be. Cubicle Flood is a dream of a flood and not a real flood.”

Daniel Alcheh’s Soundtrack

Daniel Alcheh, masterfully composed the original soundtrack of Cubicle Flood.  His music complements the flood’s progression over time without overpowering the visual elements.

One wouldn’t think that a disasterscape like a hurricane, tsunami or flood– with rising waters and rising music– would have a tranquil and meditative effect, but in Cubicle Flood, that peacefulness prevails as water and music gradually fills an otherwise sterile and impersonal office environment.

IMG_0942_2

Composer, Daniel Alcheh in His Studio
Photo by, Susanna Speier

The music and the water move through time together.  The collaborative success is evident in the  fact that sound and image inform one another without imposing narrative and context.

Transcendance

“Its a really transcendent environment, but I see it as a beautiful state, a transcendence over what the office looked like previously,” Cathy says.

The soon to be released deluxe version of this production will fill your screen at different speeds and in different office environments.  You can flood an office several times a day or spend an entire day, flooding one.

Talk to Me - Fodder for Your Commentary

What sort of screensaver do you use?
Where did it come from?
How do you know whether or not a screensaver is safe?

Bookmark and Share

Robert Frank’s America

From Blog Archive

I discovered Robert Frank’s book “The Americans” when I was in high school; it had a seminal impact on my way of perceiving/creating.  Dunno whether or not I’ll make it to the East Coast in time to see the 50th anniversary of The Americans at the Met.  Hopefully someone who does get a chance to will tell me about it, tho. Hmm, that’s not really the same as seeing it myself. Okay, well after NY it goes to DC and will be shown at the National Gallery of Art through the spring and so maybe I’ll be able to go and see it then.

From Blog Archive

Here’s the link to the exhibit at the Met
This is the National Gallery of Art show link
Here’s Philip Gefter’s NY Times review of the Exhibit:
What the New Yorker wrote about it. Includes a slide show.

Bookmark and Share

Mom’s Carousel Menagerie

Mom can tell you everything about these. When and how they were made. Sometimes even by who. She had acquired all the horses before I was born. As a result, some of my earliest memories are of these horses. I remember spending long stretches of time studying one isolated pattern until I had completely familiarized before moving on to the next.

At different times in those early years of pattern recognition the shapes and colors came to mean different things. Characters wandering, lost searching for a fairy tale or buttons on a television set. Of course, my height changed as the context did. The saddle edge eagle and the mane, once so elusive were eventually at eye level, yet the mouth and ears remained out of reach. Growing taller meant gaining eye-level access to additional details. Returning to the horses now, as an adult to photograph all these familiar details made me sad beyond belief. Mom can’t keep them, as she had always planned on doing because she’s moving into a smaller house. Thus, they need to be sold. The horses —made by Hershel and Parker— are the real deal. Mom went to great lengths to get them restored properly. The bunny and the frog are smaller recreations of the real deal. Now I’m sad all over again. A Velveteen bunny type sadness. Well, okay, so long as they end up at a loving home or a place where they are appreciated as deeply as they have been thus far, I’m okay w/ it. Not like the wooden carousel horses are gonna know. Okay, look, its just plain weird being a human being, sometimes.

Bookmark and Share

Poladroiding With Sun Tzu at The Standard

The following Ten Image Poladroid Series rediscovers the ancient Sun Tzu on a West Hollywood Saturday night at The Standard

It’s a Saturday night and I’ve finally got some a sliver of a moment to hang back and chill out with my new translation of The Art of War.


s000zArtofWarCropped-pola01

I’m reading it and remembering how life changing Sun Tzu was for me when I first discovered The Art of War in 2000.


images-pola

But, my friend, Ariane has invited me to the Purple Lounge Party at The Standard. I’m really enjoying the read but at the same time, I want to circulate and consequently I am all conflicted about what to do.

Arinne-pola

The lure of The Standard’s acutely self-aware retro decor pulls me in with its tractor beam.

Red70sLamp-pola

The change of pulsebeat; the longing to circulate…

Here Clock-pola

Utter the word “Lush” at the door of the Purple Lounge for free entry.

HandInPurple-pola

I run into a friend who wants to know what I did this evening, prior to The Purple Lounge and I tell him I was reading Sun Tzu.

Obi&Me-pola

He asks what Sun Tzu writes about.  I explain that it is about how to co-exist with conflict in a way that is mindful and balanced.   Then I add, that the most successful war is a war that does not need to be fought.

Lantern-pola

Then, several minutes later, a push and a shove.  An argument.  Neither of the two is willing to back down. Throwing my arms around the taller of the two, I twist him out of harms way and he graciously thanks me for the intervention. While my 5′3 height and 105 pound body weight didn’t provide a lot of physical mass to leverage, no one expected me to do what I did.  Thus, the element of surprise.


There-pola

Would I try this again under similar circumstances?  Actively involve myself in someone else’s conflict like this? Hard to tell.

paris-hilton-reading-the-art-of-war-preview-pola

Stranger things have happened to people who’ve read Sun Tzu, I guess.

Bookmark and Share

Hannah, Lily and Max

My cousins Hannah, Lily and Max just moved to Malibu. They used to live in the UK and still have their British Accents. Their mom, my cousin Jennifer, is home schooling them in a round house on top of a mountain.  Jennifer also makes movies with their dad, my cousin Jason.  The house is decorated with stained glass, Catalina Tiles and the gears of a ferris wheel from the Malibu Pier of yesteryear.

Max

LilyThere are wonderful things about this house—-the view of the Pacific; the crackle and roar of the fireplace on cold stormy nights; the dining room diorama of westward bound pioneers; the stellar sound system and smell of freshness serving as a reminder that we’ve still got an atmosphere. Frightening things about this house, also—rattlesnakes, coyotes and backing out of that steep, curved driveway after dark. We have great times together.

Our most recent project was taking headshots.  Waited till “magic hour” (round 5:30, 6:00pm) when the light was gold; went out onto the balcony; jumped rope, sang songs and listened to Beatles music.

Bookmark and Share