The Secret Society of Navigators

Navagator

The Secret Society of Navigators

Late last December, I was in California visiting my best friend Danielle, who amongst other curious gifts; has a knack for collecting very special and unique antiques.   I was browsing her collection when I came across a small wooden box that opened upon a telescoping golden spyglass. I felt the hair on my neck stand on end; this was one of the most magical objects I have ever laid eyes on. I promised not to damage it and a few days later I was up before sunrise walking across the sand in Venice Beach, CA, my dear friend, performer, model, contortionist, and apparently sponsored prancersizer, Sarah Llewellyn in tow.

I pinned a sparkly pink dress, five sizes too big on her, had her wade across the cold ocean water and climb up onto a pile of rocks known as “The Breakwater,” a popular surf spot, that keeps the beach from washing away. It was such a magical morning, the soft pink light, the salty air, and just before the sun popped over the horizon, hundreds of birds suddenly surrounded us and then disappeared just as fast. For almost the entire shoot the water was calm, and as we were about to wrap up, a set of waves came through and drenched poor Sarah, but made for an amazing shot. This girl is a trooper, it was now January and that water is not only powerful, but really, really, cold. Even after a hot shower and a few hours wrapped in blankets she was still shivering. Fortunately, I got the shot and it is one of my most favorite images ever; little did I know my Navigator wasn’t alone.

I have been sitting on this photo for a while, not really sure when to release it. I don’t know why I have held off for so long, but in the past week or two, I have seen a whole slew of spyglass images and it brought up a really interesting point. There has been a lot of talk in the creative photography community about plagiarism, versus inspiration, versus the collective unconscious. The first, is fairly straightforward, and I have recently seen some blatant duplication/recreation of imagery that is appalling, the second speaks to sharing your opinion on a similar theme, and I think the third borders on magical. I do believe most of the photographers I follow, are inspired by the same fairytales and have a shared aesthetic, so it is easy to see how our imagery can look a lot alike. So, when we all go out and make incredibly similar images without ever seeing each other’s work, it’s not a huge surprise. For me though, this is something special, because it feels like some deep unconscious connection to this beautiful community. I know we are all trying to make our work individual, to stand out amongst the crowd, but sometimes I feel like this deep unity is what makes this a movement, and that is a really wonderful thing to be part of.

In fact, being the dreamer that I am, I started thinking about all of the navigators out there in these images, as if they belonged to a Secret Society of Navigators.   They are seeking knowledge, leading explorations, scanning for danger, and looking out for each other. I feel like they all know one another and have special underground gatherings to share what they have learned. To me this sounds so much like all of us sharing ideas and techniques, commenting, liking, working hard to help each other, and watching out for plagiarism and theft of images. I for one, feel so blessed to be part of this, and I thank you all. So, in honor of our Secret Society of Creative Photographers, I am putting my Navigator out into the world. She came to be of her own accord, only to find she was not alone, and I am so thrilled for her to join her fellows.

I hope that this post inspires you to keep creating, to know that every photograph has not already been made. To know that we can all have brilliant ideas alone, only to find out later that others shared our vision, and that is something to be celebrated. I think we all know the difference between plagiarism and inspiration, and I often hear photographers in our community lamenting that everyone uses levitation/butterflies/birds/umbrellas/suitcases/floaty dresses/model boats/floating objects/fancy headdresses and now spyglasses, but guess what, that’s just fine with me. If these objects inspire you, let them, and bring your own voice to the party. I look forward to seeing what you create.

To see some other Navigators please follow these links… If you have a navigator you want to share let me know and I will add it to the list.

Joel Robison Photography

https://www.facebook.com/JoelRobisonPhotography/photos/pb.201124293252938.-2207520000.1433969721./986163831415643/?type=3&theater

Katherine Thomas Photography

https://www.facebook.com/kftphoto/photos/a.191894490956585.70568.191483807664320/209688232510544/?type=1&theater

Jessica Drossin Photography

https://www.facebook.com/JessicaDrossinTextures/photos/pb.376557795423.-2207520000.1433970155./10155625420290424/?type=3&theater

Alexia Sinclair Photography

https://www.facebook.com/alexiasinclair/photos/pb.1561692780783449.-2207520000.1433970254./1566484473637613/?type=3&theater

The December Solstice

The Changeling

The Changeling – As the nights became longer and the darkness thicker, she could feel the transformation beginning to take place deep in her bones. The December solstice was approaching, and her inner animal was becoming restless.

The December Solstice

I love this time of year. I am sitting in my office watching it snow and snow, big fluffy flakes. I think I will probably take tomorrow off just to go snowboarding. As the saying goes: no work or friends on a powder day. I live in the mountains of Colorado, and this is really the most magical time to be here. All of the branches of the trees in town are delicately wrapped with lights that twinkle and glow. Red ribbons, wreaths and evergreen garlands drape the light posts, and people are gathering to be joyous and merry. There are parties, food, and drinks, old friends come home, and the town seems quainter than usual. Yesterday, I saw a postman stopped on his route to enjoy a cup of something, looking suspiciously alcoholic, with friends who were lingering on a street corner. Things will get delivered, but now friendship is the only real priority.

In the Northern hemisphere, tonight will be the longest night of the year, the December solstice. Tonight, will also be a new moon. This is a powerful combination of pure darkness and new beginnings. For the next six months things will only get lighter each day. The change is exponential, in that the difference between light and dark grows faster in the spring and fall than the summer and the winter. This is due to the elliptical nature of the earth’s course around the sun. In the southern hemisphere tonight will be the longest day of the year, and holiday parties are more associated with trips to the beach than going skiing. But, I am in the north, and I am feeling the power of this night. The darkness already begins to fall and twilight shadows are creeping at four in the afternoon. I saved this image to release tonight, even thought it has been complete for weeks. I have been waiting for the magic.

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This image is about transformation, about becoming your truest self. It is about contracting and expanding, about the binaries of our inner worlds, about a truth that only you know. From the darkness comes light, and with that all things are reborn. This is why we make our resolutions at this time of the year, as we feel the potential within ourselves for transformation. This is the time to take on new projects, to let creativity flow, to share with friends and family, to feel the divinity of our universe. It is also the time to linger, to give thanks, and most of all to luxuriate in the darkness and dream.

 

Please subscribe, to get more behind the scenes blogs about my work.  Cheers and happy holidays!

The Seeker

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The Seeker

Occasionally, I have to reach into the archives and pull something out for this photo of the week project.  This was taken a few weeks back when I was on my family’s organic orchard in Coachella CA.  I wish I had time to shoot every week, alas, I do not, but I am also happy to get to show this image as otherwise it may never have seen the light of day.

The Beauty Queen

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I have been staying alone in my childhood home in Basalt, Colorado for the last ten days.  Surrounded by my past, I decided to look around the house and use props available to me to create this image.  The dress I wore to a cousin’s halloween wedding years ago, and the trophy is some antique, team sportsmanship, horseback riding trophy that was on my parent’s mantle piece.  I’m sure someone won it at one time or another, but I don’t really know its history.

The dress is really over the top, and between watching the Oscars this week and the trophy, I just knew I had to portray the runaway beauty queen.  Unfortunately she finds the world is a cold, cold, place.

Thanks to Brooke Shaden for the texture… what a wonderful blizzard it makes! #shadentextures

Princess Buttercup and her Magical Performing Horse

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I recently had the opportunity to visit my family’s organic citrus farm in Coachella, California.  My parents move out there for the winter and bring their english show jumping horses.  The horse in these photos is my mother’s Andalusian, Penafor or “Pete.” When Pete was young, before he joined our family, he was trained to do tricks for some sort of dinner show in Spain.  Today he will do just about anything for a carrot.  I had the help of my mother and best friend to make these images, as I could not handle Pete and the camera at the same time.  Everything you see here he does for fun and treats.

The idea behind this image was to bring to life the type of crayon drawings little girls do of princesses and their magical white horses.  I wanted to embody every little girl’s fantasy.   Buttercup is a role model princess who is strong, self-aware and poised, but also kind, gentle and loving.

Return to The Ex-Hacienda Jaral de Berrios

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I have already written enough about the Ex-hacienda Jaral de Berrios here, so I won’t bore you with the details.  These are some of the new images I finally got around to editing.  I am trying some new techniques, using textures over the images to give them a little extra sum thin’ sum thin’.  The textures are taken from Brooke Shaden’s texture collection.   I like the effect and I am looking forward to creating a texture collection of my own. Thanks Brooke!  #shadentextures

The Horror

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The Horror

Over the past few months, I have been returning to the Ex-Hacienda Jaral de Berio (about which you can read more here), one of my absolute  favorite places to photograph.  Although, I have an ongoing series that generally fits together, this week I veered off from my usual work.  I think in the past I have always, in so many ways, been portraying the spirit that haunts that place.  After shooting all morning, suddenly in the afternoon, I had the urge to be the one that the ghosts were haunting.  I found myself running around, pretending I was in some sort of horror film.  I was hiding, running, trying to survive, and ultimately succumbing to a very Vertigo, moment, when it all gets to me and I commit suicide.  So this week, I have decided not to just show one image for my photo of the week, but a whole little series.  I would love to know which is your favorite, as only one can truly be my ‘photo of the week.’  Please leave me a message in the comments.

4/52 San Juan de los Lagos

Every year, twelve million pilgrims visit the small Mexican town of San Juan de los Lagos.  It is one of the most venerated sights in Mexico, second only to the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City (where you can view Juan Diego’s cloak with the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe).  The faithful and curious, come to San Juan de los Lagos to see a small thirty-eight centimeter statue made in the 1500’s of sugarcane paste.  Known as the “Smiling” Virgin, “Cihuapilli” in Nahuatl, or just the “Great Lady,” her first miracle is said to have dated back to 1623:

“A family of acrobats had a show which included “flying” over a field of spear points. The seven-year-old daughter fell onto the spears during the act and immediately died. Local women brought the image to the body and prayed over it when the child revived. This miracle made the image famous.[6] Since then, many other miracles have since been attributed to her intercession, often related to recuperation from mortal danger or dangerous illnesses.[7]

Today, many pilgrims still walk on foot to see the virgin, just as they have for hundreds of years.  For this particular pilgrimage, the faithful leave from cites all over Mexico to arrive in San Juan de los Lagos on February second for Candlemas.  Candlemas, is a celebration held forty days after the birth of Jesus, commemorating when Mary was recovered from childbirth and her motherhood was blessed in the church.  This small town of 55,000 inhabitants is mobbed with over two million visitors this weekend alone.  Many flock there to fulfill promises made to the virgin over the past year, lest they be turned to stone!

I was invited to walk with C.A.S.A., an organization for whom I have been volunteering over the past several months.  They provide everything from women’s healthcare, childcare, violence and sexual education programs, GLBT awareness, exercise classes, radio shows, midwife training, and so much more.  On this day, we were walking with the pilgrims as they left San Miguel de Allende to bring attention to the high rates of domestic violence suffered by women across Mexico. Leaving the central square at five am, we walked for about seven hours, as the sun came up over Guanajuato’s beautiful farm country and wild deserts.

Around noon, we headed back to town, and the pilgrims walked on to complete the first of nine days and an over one-hundred-and-twenty-five mile journey.  I arrived home, spent, exhausted, and sore, yet also buoyed, floating, and high.  After a hot bath, and much thanks for a warm bed instead of a night in a tent, I realized I needed more.  Immediately, I made plans to find the pilgrims the following day and continue walking.  Enlisting a good friend, we spent the morning in a taxi chasing down the procession.  They had risen before dawn, to start walking in the cool morning air and had already covered a tremendous distance.  Astounded, it took us almost thirty minutes by car to find them, we could not believe they had already walked more than twenty-five miles in less than two days.  This feat seems fairly plausible, until you realize that at least a third of the pilgrims are over sixty-five and walk with canes, another third are carrying infants or pushing strollers barely suitable for a doll, and the rest are young and able bodied but carry banners, huge crosses, and litter-boxes with venerated saints.  Even so, after the first day, many were limping, their sore feet and nasty blisters the result of walking in miserable cheap sneakers.  Yet they carried on, lifted by the prayer, song, the spirit of the collective and the power of their faith.

A few years ago, I walked three weeks worth of the Camino Santiago in northern Spain, another ancient pilgrimage route dating back to the era of the Knights Templar.  According to pilgrim mythology, along the way, the “angels” of the Camino will often greet you and pass on their blessings.  These assorted souls, generally come out of nowhere and drift back into the ether, but bring you exactly what you need to carry on.  On one very rainy, cold, day, in a section of the Camino where there are no villages for several kilometers, I was feeling discouraged and I had stopped to stretch and rest.  Along came a tiny bowlegged old man, no taller than five feet, wearing a ratty, red, rain poncho and using a long wooden walking staff.

Like a medieval storybook character, his walking stick was adorned with a dangling scallop shell and gourd, both ancient symbols of the Camino.  In his other hand, he had a plastic grocery bag that held a bottle of red wine and few oranges.  Other than that, he carried nothing.  He stopped, pealed an orange and offered me half.  Having walked alone for days, I was in desperate need of companionship, and this was an extraordinary blessing.  We walked together for several hours, and although my Spanish was poor, he told me that he had walked the whole Camino over forty times, and that it was his annual vacation.  This is really something considering the Camino is over five hundred miles long.  Although, I glimpsed him here and there, and he checked in on me every few days to see that I was well, he left me that afternoon with the taste of orange in my mouth and the inspiration to continue my journey.

The pilgrimage to San Juan de los Lagos is no different, and within a few hours of walking on the second day, we met a man in his mid seventies.  This gentleman, had walked to see the virgin every year of his life.  He laughed and told jokes, and then he noted that we had such fair skin compared to his deep walnut brown.  Although, skin color is common topic of conversation in Mexico, and the basis of much classism, what followed was a beautiful discussion of how our hearts are what matter, not our skin color.  This is a deep seated beliefs of mine, but at the moment, it came from a place of such pure love that it was utterly moving. Eventually, our younger legs out paced our companion. When we stopped to wait for him under a tree, even after a long break, he never came, and we were left wondering if he really existed at all.  Repacking our snacks, we walked on, only to encounter even more sweet “angels” on the way.

Along the route, the local villagers come out to support the pilgrims and hand out water, atole, coffee, bread, and fruit.  One of these was a lovely elderly woman, who stopped me as I walked by.  She had pyramids of mandarins, oranges, sweet lemons, and peanuts laid out on a tarp.  She wanted me to photograph the man with whom she sat and to tell me his story.  I am still unsure of their relation, if they were father and daughter, or husband and wife, as their Spanish was colloquial, accented and tough to understand.  What I did glean, was that he was ninety years old and spry, a gift he attributed to previous pilgrimages to see the virgin.  Although a bit hunched over, he fell to his knees to show me that he was still strong enough to dig in his garden, and claimed he was pain free after all these years.  When he laughed, his toothless smile was one of the worlds most radiant and joyous.  We talked to them for a while, taking lots of photos, and when we set off, they handed us a huge plastic bag full of oranges picked from their own trees.  Later in the day, as we climbed a long hot hill, that bag got heavier and heavier, but the fruit was incredibly delicious on our bus ride home and ultimately became the inspiration for this week’s photo.

In both of my pilgrimage experiences, the orange has become the symbol of my journey.  An orange is such a humble offering, yet so full of abundance and the sweetness of life.  Each time, I was overwhelmed with the kindness this gift represented and I hope to never forget the potency of this simple form of generosity.  Thus, for my image, I chose to show a pilgrim approaching the virgin, at the end of her travels, offering an orange.  She has nothing more to give, yet could not give anything more.  The orange in this image, is one my “angels” gave me that afternoon.

The Pilgrimage:

Janelle_Pietrzak-10The doorway to the Paroquia, overflowing with pilgrims as they listen to a 4am mass before leaving for San Juan de los lagos.

Janelle_Pietrzak-12After mass, preparing to leave.

Janelle_Pietrzak-11Locals handing out a sweet hot punch, in front of the church, to warm a chilly morning.

Janelle_Pietrzak-13Traditional dances in the main square kick off the procession.

Janelle_Pietrzak-14Walking along the train tracks as the sun begins to rise.

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Janelle_Pietrzak-16The lights of San Miguel de Allende, still lit in the early morning light.

Janelle_Pietrzak-17Watching the procession.

Janelle_Pietrzak-18The young carrying crosses, banners and saints.

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Janelle_Pietrzak-25Sunrise over the Laja River.

Janelle_Pietrzak-26Local tough guys and their massive cross.

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Stopping for a free breakfast of tortillas, chicken mole, and rice.

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The procession along the road, each church had their own bullhorns and were singing and saying prayers at the same time.  Quite a racket.

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The back of the procession is followed up by men who carry stretchers, so they can ferry any fallen pilgrims along the way.

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A family rests.  These are not massive SUV strollers they push for a hundred miles.

Janelle_Pietrzak-33Much of the way is walked on hard pavement that exhausts your feet.  A crew on four wheelers stops traffic to keep the pilgrims safe.

Janelle_Pietrzak-36So many faces.

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Janelle_Pietrzak-43The path veering off the road into the harsh but beautiful Guanajuato desert.

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Pilgrims in the landscape.

Janelle_Pietrzak-2Resting under a tree.

Janelle_Pietrzak-6Local farmers taking an afternoon siesta.

Janelle_Pietrzak-4The best smile in the world.

Janelle_Pietrzak-5Beer break.

Janelle_Pietrzak-8Naughty kids take advantage of a very tired father.

Janelle_Pietrzak-9Entrepreneurs

Janelle_Pietrzak-7Mobile pilgrims hospital set up in the encampment.

4/52 – The Offering:

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Broken Hearted 3/52

As I intended this project to be an exploration of the photographic medium, I decided to have some fun with this image.  Inspired by the art of my old friend Sandi Calistro, I wanted to see if  I could really make myself look like one of her drawings.  I enlisted the help of another friend Taran Rowe to give me an amazing up do, and then using photoshop, I believe I was able to get pretty close to what I wanted.  This is my first attempt at using photoshop in this manner and I think with a bit of practice I could really have some fun with this technique.

#3 Broken Heart