Posts Tagged ‘Writing’

Miranda July

Monday, July 14th, 2008

I’ve just read (finally) Miranda July‘s book of short stories No One Belongs Here More Than You. When I finished it I closed the book, took a breath, and started over again from the beginning. Some of her words, I swear I’ve thought through the same scenes, dialogues, imagery, ideas in my head and then forgotten them before I’d gotten to a pen and paper. Ever since I saw Me and You and Everyone We Know, I’ve been completely enraptured with everything she does.

If you haven’t seen the movie, see it. I have it, you can borrow it.

If you haven’t read the book, read it. I have it, you can borrow it.

If you want to know more about her (which you should), go to her website (www.mirandajuly.com) or the website for the amazing project she created with Harrell Fletcher called Learning to Love you More (www.learningtoloveyoumore.com).

The amount of emotion in every word he writes, thinks, inks, directs, is amazing. Is perfect. Is inspiring.

Is It Your Life Or Just Letters? Take Them And Write Your Own.

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

Walking along the sidewalk, she stopped suddenly and began rummaging through her bag.

“What is it?” he asked.

“Oh nothing, just the sky. I need to take a picture.”

He looked up. Just sparse clouds in an otherwise clear day. She turned her camera upwards, zoomed in, out, adjusted some settings, snap.

“Let me see,” he said.

She handed him the camera and in the foreground, in the bottom righthand corner of the fram was the top corner of the 2-story red adobe house they were standing next to. The sky was bright and dotted with clouds in all the background everywhere else. Completely minimal and nothing he’d even noticed.

“Wow. Can you frame that for me?”

“Sure,” she said, and held her two hands to the sky, making a small rectangle of right thumb to left index finger, right index finger to her left thumb. “See.”

“That’s not what I meant. I mean when you print it, can I have a copy?”

“But I’m giving you a copy right now. And this one’s better than some cheap plastic frame. It’s personalized.”

“Yeah but I can’t take it with me and hang it on my wall.”

“You can hang it in your memory,” she said. “Just like the printed version, it’s you decision whether you want to keep it up and look at it from time to time, or take it down and let it gather dust until you forget what it looks like.”

“Fine,” he said. “I’ll take it.”

He lifted the camera and took a picture of her hands framing the small piece of sky.

“But I want the printed version as well. For when I don’t have your hands nearby to frame it for me.”

“Suit yourself,” she said. “But this one’s limited edition, just for you.”

This image discovered via ffffound.

This writing via me.

Heroes & Villains: My Words on NYLONmag.com

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

I wrote another article for NYLON, this one about the Heroes & Villains exhibit that is about to open for two days only at the Corey Helford Gallery in California. It’s a photography exhibit entirely made up of portraits of graffiti, pop surrealist, and alt-comic book artists and it’s pretty darn cool. The initial exhibit only lasted two days but will now go on to San Francisco and several other cities throughout the country. The photos are all by Tatiana Wills and Roman Cho, two amazing artists who took on the three-year-long project in order to showcase some of the amazing artistic talents that are shaping our cultural vernacular as we speak. Please click the image (which I made) to read the entire article and see some of the photos that make up this awesome one-of-a-kind exhibit.

A Few More NYLON Graphics Before I Go

Monday, April 14th, 2008

Here are the latest batch of images I made for NYLON. There aren’t too many of them this time around because I was also busy writing a couple of articles that day. C’est la vie.


(Oh yeah, and I wrote the article for the one above too.)

Alex Prager Photography

Friday, April 11th, 2008

I just wrote another article for NYLON that is up on the website now. It’s all about Alex Prager and her upcoming (second ever) solo photography exhibition, her first exhibition in the UK. In researching her stuff I’ve come to admire her a lot. She’s entirely self-taught and stopped even going to school after the 8th grade. And yet her photos are all amazing.

Every image is incredibly saturated with color and has a eerie look to it, kind of a voyeurism feel, and as though you’ve only been given a glimpse into a scene that makes up an entire elaborate story.

Click on the image below – which I made – to see the whole article (please!):