Throwback Thursday with a story and a message. These were taken a little over two years ago in Santa Rosa, to this day unseen. The selection depicts burned-out neighborhoods that I had a chance to visit only a few weeks after the fire happened. Even though the devastation was overwhelming and the sadness from pollution real, I was thinking that the people from these affluent neighborhoods probably stay at nice hotels and the insurance will allow them to rebuild - bigger, better. One year later I was traveling through California, working on another project when the biggest fires, probably in the history of the State hit really hard. The town of Paradise, CA burned almost completely to the ground. I made some prints and donated them into a silent auction for the residents of Paradise - the least I could do. Because unlike the hillside neighborhoods of Santa Rosa, Paradise was a humble, working city. I stayed in the area at the time and inhaled smoke-infested air for weeks. For over a week we couldn't see the sun. It was a sad continuation of what I saw a year before in Santa Rosa and what's becoming a norm in CA. Right now half of Australia is burning. As much devastated as I was touching upon the tragedy in California, nothing beats the half a billion dead animals and an uncountable amount of destroyed wilderness in Australia. How many more disasters do we have to witness to start really acting against climate change? Humans do influence changes in the climate and these fires are indirectly our fault! We simply cannot continue on this path of consumption and destruction. I know that an individual may feel hopeless, but every action helps. Even in setting the example, spreading awareness and educating others. Let us start taking care of this beautiful home we have. We won't get a new one. |
Showing posts with label usa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label usa. Show all posts
#tbt, our world in flames
NYC at 45 degrees
Browsing through some old pictures I stumbled upon this little series. Never published it anywhere, so there you go. Pictures come from 2007 and 2008 (I think.) Just seeing the Big Apple from a proper perspective. Also, these are my first years shooting digital. It's been three years since I was in New York and I'm really starting to miss the place. <3 NYC ! |
the outskirts of colorado
Probably the least photogenic, but interesting nevertheless, Colorado day included a night at another surreal Navajo Casono-hotel, Mesa Verde rock dwellings, a progressive town Durango and a lot of driving through small-town America of the South-West. I got used to being on the road again, that's for sure! |
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navajoland
Navajo Nation spreads across Arizona, Utah and New Mexico. It can't be distinguished on an average map of the US (obviously), but It's a complex, well organized and developing "nation within a nation" (the Navajo claim they're American patriots too, they're not separatist, just well self-governed.) After the busy morning of studying this fascinating nation in lectures and meetings (including the meet with the Vice President of the Government, and a visit to the Navajo Council) we took out to the desert and the beautiful wilderness of this land. One of the highlights was the Monument Valley which I can't believe I visited again! |
chaco canyon, nm
Chaco Canyon cuts through the New Mexico desert in the north-west of the state. It has quite a big concentration of pueblos (including Pueblo Bonito in the two first pictures), dating back to pre-Columbian times. Also, it's a very remote place with little people and a few beautiful trails. |
acoma pueblo, nm
Pueblo of Acoma is situated one hour West from Albuquerque, NM. Situated on top of a rock, It's one of the oldest settlements in the US. It was great to tour this spiritual village and see how the traditional native culture is blending with American culture of today. An evening in the Sky City casino, owned by the community was also an interesting experience. Go to Acoma Pueblo Wikipedia page to learn more about the history of this place. |