Thursday, September 9, 2010

Self Portrait

I recently found a letter from my grandmother containing twenty dollars. I must have been about seven when I had received it. I stumbled upon it while cleaning out my dresser this past summer, preparing to unpack from my first year of college. It stated that she wanted me to go through a catalogue, that must have been enclosed with the letter, and pick out some new clothes to order. If I needed more money I just had to ask and she would send whatever I wanted.

Up until I was about seventeen, my entire wardrobe consisted of sweatpants and t-shirts. This has always been what I am most comfortable in. My mother never taught me the ins and outs of being a girl. Makeup isn’t in my vocabulary. Dresses are always too short. My boobs are never big enough for varying necklines. Heels make me look like a giant.

When I came upon this letter all that I could think was that my grandmother had been ashamed of her first grandchild’s choices in clothing.

As I have gotten older, I have slowly allowed myself to add more of a variety to my closet. First trying jeans, then lower cut t-shirts and finally venturing into the world of dresses. But the truth is, I will always feel most comfortable in baggier clothes. However, when I am wearing basketball shorts or baggy sweatpants with a loose t-shirt and my hair up, I feel as if the World, like my grandmother, is judging me for preferring to dress like a boy over wearing pretty, girly, tight clothes. When I am wearing a dress with my hair nicely done and heels killing my feet, all I want to do is slouch down on a chair into a relaxed position, which just happens to involve my legs being slightly open.

All rather inappropriate for a young lady.

Monday, May 3, 2010

All That Remains

Four months at sea,
Four months of calm seas,
To be pounded in the shallows off the tip of Montauk Point.
They call them rouges,
They travel fast and alone,
One-hundred-foot-faces of God's good ocean gone wrong.
What they call love is a risk cause you will always get hit out of nowhere by some wave and end up on your own.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Allegory

Inspired by Apollo and Daphne by Paolo Veronese

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Caution

I never said I wouldn't break a heart.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

A Bridge Between Two Worlds

There is a certain enjoyment to be found in watching airplanes come and go,
knowing that one day you will be on one headed to the place that you love the most,
someone else watching on with hopes of the day that their seat belt sign turns on.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

This is not a goodbye

I began this blog a little under three months ago as a requirement for my Freshman Photography class at RIT. At first I was rather apprehensive as to displaying my work online, I always have been. Anyone could find it, steal it and possibly take credit for it. But I have maintained personal blogs in the past so I was excited to be given one as an assignment. So with this, and the hope that Metadata would do its job, I went on and I am happy that I did.

I used this blog to post my photographs that mean the most to me and ones that described how I was feeling at that current moment in time. I enjoyed creating captions that were somewhat abstract in that they didn’t speak directly to the image. They instead related an aspect of my personal life to the subject of the photograph. “You should write greeting cards” is how my dad responded to the words accompanying my photographs. This was probably my favorite part of the blog.

Maintaining this blog has also allowed my family and friends to see what I am presently paying forty thousand dollars a year to learn. I don’t often share my work with them so they were rather excited to venture into my world, especially my parents who even showed my grandma how to access it on her rarely used computer.

I plan on continuing this blog in hopes that one day it may develop into something more, something to further my work and career.

Until next time.

Destruction Worth Weeping Over

My freshman year of High School I ventured into the dark room.
Upon receiving my first assignment regarding line and texture I presented my teacher with an image of a destroyed weeping willow next to a lake.
The rest is history.
Or so someday it may be.