Sun-Starved

Our Vitamin-D deficient adventures in Seattle (and elsewhere)

Last assignment for #UnaFotoXdíaX28días: "A message for Venezuela."

 

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Assignment #28: My message for Venezuela

 

Today is the last day of #UnaFotoXdíaX28días. The last assignment is "A message for Venezuela."  My photo is simple. On a background that offers nothing but emptiness, I chose to place children holding hands and flowers. My message is a request: it's my way to ask for peace and understanding in my country. I won't delve deeper into this, as lately, my feelings about what is going on in Venezuela are too stirred up to talk about it. 

Instead, I prefer to talk about photography. A few posts ago, I talked about participating in the photo challenge #UnaFotoXdíaX28días with my school in Venezuela, Roberto Mata Taller de Fotografía. For a photographer, this is a perfect challenge as it keeps participants making images everyday (one of my most important pieces of advice for those going into photography). Also, it spurs creativity and awakens the sense of urgency that spices up a photographer's life. For me, it fueled my need to pursue a story.

It was twenty eight photos for twenty eight days of February. I made photos for the challenge in four different American cities. Some days I hated the fact that I had to poke my brain, grab my camera and figure something out. But most of the time, I was elated; I fulfilled a daily deadline with something of my own creation.

I am pleased with most of the photos and moved to tears by a couple. Also, a very interesting "indoor" series unfolded in my imagination due to the lack of time to go out and shoot. I'm blaming the quality and lack of brightness of the outdoor light that happens on Winter gray days.

This series was done with the help of my wired gadgets (laptop, desktop and smartphone). Some of the images were arrangements of my own photos or those found on the Internet. Some I collaged on the "virtual desktop" of my computers. This last option allowed me to work around "Appropriation", a style that has produced some million-dollar images like the re-photographed Malboro Man by photographer Richard Prince

Not that I had those million dollar signs in my head. I utterly enjoyed developing a new body of work that I plan to keep exploring from now on. 

This is the original photo I shot for the last assignment, with my own photo taken in Trujillo State, back in 2005.

 

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These are some of the photos I made by using imagery found in Internet: 

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Assignment #11: spiral staircase (this one includes Youtube imagery as well)

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Assignment #26: boyscout (used screen and a frame glued to said screen)

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Assignment #16: a liar (used Blackberry Smartphone)

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Assignment #5: bowling shoes (used screen)

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Assignment #23: 1 KM (used screen)

 

 

 

 

 


 

About T-Rex dinosaurs and sharing mixtapes with friends

I have been in San Francisco for the past week, exploring the city and falling in love with it.  And while in here, I embarked in a 28 photos x 28 days project with my photography school from Caracas, Roberto Mata Taller de Fotografia, where I started my photography studies back in 2004.   This entry is to show one of the photos I made for Day Uno. The assignment was to find a "T-Rex" (yes, the dinosaur!) and photograph it. Fortunately, my very talented and good friend, artist Ytaelena Lopez, has a piece with a cigar-loving, black and white and kick-ass T-Rex I couldn't pass or resist. Here's the photo of said gentleman.

 

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Also, and thanks to Ryan, I was introduced to Mixtape.me.  Here, people can create playlists and share them with the world.  Because Ryan and I are married thanks to music (we met back in 2007 on Last.fm), I now have a stronger love for it. Sharing music gives me a pleasure I can barely describe. Let's leave that to a small, 6-track mix tape I created to share with people.

Enjoy!

 

 

Ryan @ Last.fm (he listens to really great music, no wonder I ended marrying him, right?)

Valentina @ Last.fm

Flavors.me, my new virtual "postcard"

Posterousflowers

Writer, photographer and daydreamer from Caracas living in the United States.

My website
Sun-starved
Facebook
Twitter

 

(Click on the flavors.me link just above this sentence to see my site)

I can't help it: I love how this current virtual world works like nowadays. The fact that many new initiatives are surfacing and consolidating, helping people break barriers and engage in new relationships, rapidly erasing frontiers is fascinating. The "community building" as the ultimate goal in this companies is changing the way we interact. Many of my friends in Seattle were first Twitter or Yelp friends, and now some of them are almost like family to us. My last discovery is Flavors.me. I made my "postcard" website (got to love Dhalias!). The fact that I can share it in several outlets like LinkedIn, Twitter and here on Posterous is the best display of true collaboration between online services! Enjoy!

 

Filed under  //   Valentina Vitols Studio   flavors   flavors.me   mini-websites   online presence   websites  

If you are in Seattle, you are invited to "Arroz con Mango"!

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For Cubans, Arroz con Mango (rice with mango), translates into "what a mess."  For Venezuelans, it's more about mixing this and that and putting it all together.  We use it mostly to talk about gatherings where you invite everyone you know, no matter how different they are. It usually ends up being a phenomenal experience.

I am framing all of the prints I have and putting them out for this show.  No theme or series in particular, just an Arroz con Mango with work I have done in the past seven years.  All the prints will be for sale. 

I am closing a chapter of my professional life by leaving SoDo and looking into moving the Studio to another neighborhood.  Come celebrate with me in my last show at the Orange Door Studios lobby gallery. 

The address is 1941 1st Ave S, Seattle, WA 98134 (same building where Macrina SoDo is located).  The show will go from 6-9pm.

Nibbles/Drink/Music will be provided.  One print will be part of a silent auction that will benefit Aver School, the non-profit organization I work for. 

If you want to RSVP, you can do at the Facebook Event Page by clicking here: http://bit.ly/b8DiSa

Hope to see you there!

Photo giveaway and what Cinco de Mayo actually celebrates

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Twitter, oh, good 'ol Twitter!  I love how it can get people connected, communicated, and how can it get you (and others) great information, deals and good, meaningful friendships.  Now and then, I like to have an occassional contest and put out some giveaways.  Today I posted a question, and less than a minute later, the lovely Jen Joyce (@knitpurl) sent me her answer.  She had the correcta answer!  That won her a framed 4x6 print on Kodak Professional Metallic paper from my studio.  The photo on this post is the one that soon will be hanging on Jen's home sweet home.

What I asked on Twitter in exchange of this giveaway was what Cinco de Mayo actually celebrates.  It's interesting to see how some foreign holidays observed in the U.S. sometimes are an excuse to get together and drink, but only few people can answer what they are celebrating.  I was pleased to see I got several replies, all of them correct.

According to MexOnline.com, Cinco de Mayo "commemorates the victory of the Mexican militia over the French army at The Battle Of Puebla in 1862. It is primarily a regional holiday celebrated in the Mexican state capital city of Puebla and throughout the state of Puebla, with some limited recognition in other parts of Mexico, and especially in U.S. cities with a significant Mexican population. It is not, as many people think, Mexico's Independence Day, which is actually September 16." 

(For full information about Cinco de Mayo, please click here.)

¡Felicitaciones, Jen!