“All I wanted was the dream…”

It is one thirty a.m. I can’t seem to get to sleep to night. The studio is dark and the coldness is beginning to settle in around me. I am attired in my under amour and settled into the sofa in my shooting room. We have had such coldness for so long that it’s been hard to get out lately, but tonight it has warmed up and I can hear rain on the skylights above my head. With the blog project and my focus on getting myself organized and my regular work projects I feel like I have become a shut in. Time in this studio, my head, and the blog has all become non-linear. Tonight my head is swimming with thoughts for new ideas and my ever-constant search for focus and direction. I was going to work on my new crash course on Dream Weaver but am now just content with the stillness. It feels like this is the first moment of stillness and solitude I have been able to appreciate since the whole project began. I have so many questions that I have been looking for the answers to and if by magic they the answers are beginning to appear. My connection to this project and others is far stronger than I ever imagined. I am finding exactly what I have been searching for. To belong in a community where I was respected and could live in something far greater then myself. I have mixed emotions about whether we are born to become artist or whether it is something we learn. Growing up on a cattle ranch in a very small town in the mountains of Western Montana I was not really exposed to art, theatre, or really even television. No one else in my family was creative so how was I exposed to it? Yet I feel an innate compulsive desire to create. I know deep in my heart it has always been there. Living on a ranch you learn to improvise and become creative with finding or creating your own entertainment. To be artistically inclined and have no connection to art raises a lot of questions of uncertainty and definitely smothers your self-esteem, you become an outcast because so much of the world you are involved in just doesn’t get or understand what you are doing. I have felt lost or misplaced so much of my life. It’s definitely a harder struggle to maintain any kind of life in the arts. My brothers all seem to have a greater sense of security as we all grow older, yet I feel I am in constant struggle. My older brother, Kelley works for NASA in Clear Lake, Texas working on space travel at least this is quantitative and measurable. Life in the theater was always ephemeral, lasting but within the moment of it’s existence. The creation of art is so subjective and has a different meaning according to the individual’s perspective and does not contain value for everyone and often doesn’t acquire worth until after you are gone because it needs to be examined in retrospect and placed in context. So all we can do is live with the dream and continue the exploration.

I posed this question to several of my artist friend around the world: “Are we truly born with a gift or is it actually cultivated?” What has been your experience regarding your evolution as an artist on this issue? I will explore and share the answers in upcoming entries.

“All I wanted was the dream
Just like anybody else
I didn’t want it pushed aside
Forgotten on a shelf
But then you wake up and it seems
The dream that you dream
Was just too good to last
I wanted laughs and lots of lovers
And limitless wealth
I just want to say you’re better
Than anybody else
All I wanted was the time
To obliterate my past
I didn’t know that time can come and go
So terribly fast
It’s hard to lose it
When you had it right here
In your grasp”

Lyrics from the musical “The Boy from Oz” written by Peter Allen, Nick Enright and Martin Sherman. I saw Isabel Keating sing this song as the character of Judy Garland in the NY Broadway production. It rocked me to my core and has haunted me since.

Clash of the Titans

We are two weeks down with fifty to go. So far it feels like a success. I am totally enjoying this process and boy has it kept me on task and focused on photography and my imagery which is what I have needed for a very long time. I am frustrated still by the fact that can’t quite figure out how to make links from my blog to other artists or works of art I want to reference. I have been connecting to so many fantastic artists around the world and want to begin sharing what I am learning from them but need to be able to make the link to them first. Anyone know how to make this work? Anyone know how to write the HTML code that can add the link within the text? We as artists must coexist as a collective to support, grow, and understand the significance of our work and the times in which we live and create.

I am splintered into two separate identities and still trying to figure out which direction to take myself. There is this seductive internal artist that love to explore his attraction to sensual imagery and the professional portrait business photographer who loves to do weddings, senior portraits, and entertainment. Of course living in Montana I must relay on the business side to sustain myself. Somehow the two styles have always seemed to clash and cancel each other. Years ago I built a website to showcase my portrait work but have always struggled with where to draw the lines. I did not want to show nudity on a site that caters toward the general consumer so as to not offend anyone and as a consideration toned down what I actually use yet sort of hinted at what I might also be interested in. Hence my more powerful and provocative work has been hidden for the past ten years and just recently begun to emerge. Do I have to create two separate identities to exist? If I do, how do I remain true to myself when I am a remarkable combination of both? How can I get these two worlds to coexist? Do they? Should they? Is it possible to somehow make money with the more provocative images and not to have to rely on the other? One of my goals of creating this project is to connect somehow, somewhere to someone that can help me get some kind of a show, calendar or publication. Am I doomed because I choose to live in a remote area of the world I love?

Glenn keeps asking me: “What is your target?” The answer keeps coming back to my reasons for beginning this project. To put myself entire self out there and share my creative talents with others. To create a retrospective of my images, of who I am and how I lived my life. You see I have had one of the most remarkable lives anyone could ever imagine and would like to somehow impart my vast experience on others before it is lost.

I want to share a quote from a conversation I had with Jim Ferringer, a sculptural artist and photographer, living in Indiana that hits the nail on the head. “The male nude is still a very taboo subject here in the US but I do believe it is slowly changing here, in a few centuries it might even be as accepted here as it is in Europe………The male body is as beautiful as the female body and there is no reason it should not be seen as much. I will say there are just too many times when someone post a close up of their manhood taken by a crappy cell phone and post it everywhere, I question this as art and may even set the acceptability of male nudes back.

Images of My Dead Grandmother

Rus was my creative soul mate. He is a writer, teacher, and creative make-up artist who was also a model and test subject for me. We spent a great deal of time working on some of my favorite projects. One of our best shoots was exploring issues I had with a grandmother I didn’t know well. She killed herself when I was a very young. I found this old laundromat in Butte, Montana. Butte was a booming cooper-mining city some 100 years back that dried up and is now a hollow shell of those glory days. Anyway, I had this shoot in my head for a long time. Glenn was going to school in Butte at the time and Rus was just passing though on his way to start a new life and we ended up in Butte together one night. We rushed to Wal Mart for the perfect attire, distressed it off the grimy streets and began to shoot. It was a blast. There was an old gay hanging out in the laundromat that kept trying to pick up Rus because he thought she was so beautiful. You have to know that Rus in about 6’5” and when he adds heels and a wig his one tall gal. Here is what I wrote after the shoot and if you want to see more images on this series there is a link on the side. Still have difficulty figuring out the link thing on here. Just a note that Rus used this image on the cover of his first book of short stories called “I Had Mourned This Already and Other Stories”

Images of my Dead Grandmother
I never really quite knew her, but have a vague recollection of her warmth toward me. Yet I feel like she has been one of the most influential people in my life. She died when I was a three. She spent her most of her life living on the fringe of desperation, an outcast far ahead of her time, destroyed by the culture that surrounded her. She grew up in an ultra Christian house, where her cotton farm foreman father, (who shot a black man for crossing their front porch on night), molested and repeatedly raped her while her mother looked the other way and condemned her to hell. He was a very hard man and she married young to my grandfather to escape him. I believe this was the only true love and happiness she experienced in her life, she become the quintessential housewife and had finally settled into a life of “normalcy”. He was killed on his way back from World War II in a freak car accident where he was going to tell her he had met some one else and wanted a divorce, something that would haunt her the rest of her life. She spent years at the bottom of a barrel, drinking, working as a prostitute, and sleeping her way from man to man. Always running, dragging her children with her, always desperate. She had two children she tired to kill several times in fits of drunkenness, by pushing them out of windows and leaving them abandoned with strangers most of the time. She was in and out of the state mental hospitals. Finally she was pulling her life back together, sobered up, met a man she married and began to settle down. I have been told I was her greatest joy. But something happened one night that drove her to the ultimate act of desperation as she took a pistol and shot herself in the stomach. She died on the way to the hospital. I often try to imagine what was going through her head that one night.

I have always felt I was different, living on my own edge of desperation, gay, addicted to sex and drugs, hustling myself; lost in the night, drifting. Sure I was not going to make it to my 30th birthday. Was it hereditary? Was I destined to follow the same path? Though I didn’t really know her did she somehow depart her desperation on me? There has always been a bond that ties me to her. Recently I turned 42, which was the age she died, it was a very eerie time. It defiantly messed up my mother. She never got over it.

I had seen this laundromat years ago in Butte and every time I passed these windows I would see my dead grandmother hanging out in there. I have been trying to come up with a way to capture the essence of who she was and what she felt. With the help of my friend Rus Buyok I have finally been able to realize, my own feelings, anxieties, and emotions and in a way represent what she too must have gone through.

“She was happy, and perfectly in line with the tradition of those women they used to call “ruined,” “fallen,” feckless, bitches in heat, ravished dolls, sweet sluts, instant princesses, hot numbers, great lays, succulent morsels, everybody’s darlings . . . “
— Jean Genet (Querelle)

Has porn become homogenized?

What’s happened to the art of pornography? Is it because I am getting older or have we as a gay culture just been homogenizing the images of our selves naked? I remember a time when these types of pictures of naked men were exciting and titillating. There seemed to be a raw sensual quality to the images. They were more of a sedation, becoming alluring and drawing us in. But now it’s just about putting the ol wanker out there and call it good. All the model seems to have the same shape and form with the same expression, void of any connection to what they are doing. Nobody seems to care. How do you expect someone else to buy into it if you can’t buy into yourself? Perhaps this has just become an era saturated with budging biceps, ripped abs, and protruding appendages. When did models lose any sense of personality? Perhaps with the Internet now more of it needs to be produced at such a rapid rate that any kind of artistic freedom just goes out the window. This type of work used to at least be inspirational, paying attention to light, detail, and setting; weaving fantasies for us to at least buy into and stir our imagination. Really famous art photographers of today like Steven Underhill did amazing beautiful porn and were looked up to for inspiration. Mind you I don’t think this type of imagery was meant to be high art and am aware of it’s function, but think this movement toward a faked apathetic realism is mostly flat and boring.

Recently I was going though a box of old porn, stashed in the basement and ran across an old Men Magazine from Feb 1987 that was one of my greatest treasures. For long ago I spied a young cattle ranch boy from Rexberg Idaho named Bart Ward and fell in love. Bart was so much like me and I instantly had a connection. He was my ideal dream boy; my same age, wearing wranglers, his shirt unbuttoned, holding a black cowboy hat, his slightly tousled non-styled brown hair, those piercing blue eyes gazing into mine with a gentle longing, just candidly sitting in front of his barn. The rest of the images in the series slowly revealing his not so toned, natural beautiful body, tastefully, exposing him self, with the final image of him completely nude. These images haunted my memory of Bart creating an ever-lasting desire to connect with him. Once on a trip though Idaho, my curiosity still peaked, I went 30 miles out of my way to visit Rexberg. I still feel a strong connection to this stranger I have never met. I wonder about his life and how it all turned out, as if he were a past love. Carlos Quiroz and your images of Bart bore an inspiration in me to photograph men nude. After all these years you still move and stir a passion within.

Am I the only one out there that feels that pornography has become utterly uninteresting?

“The Internet is for porn
Grab your dick and double click
The Internet is for porn, porn, porn”
Lyrics from the musical “Avenue Q” by Jeff Marx and Robert Lopez

“The World is a Showplace”

The art and importance of networking and collaboration has been my focus this week. The Internet is incredibly awesome for networking. I have vaguely been familiar with a lot of people out there, but feel I have been too busy, or insecure to actually make the connection. I am beginning to meet so many people that are going though a lot of the same issues and struggles I am. Suddenly this blog seems to generate interest or curiosity in a lot of people. The first one, ten days ago, started with just a couple of friends and yesterday there were a hundred and ten. The model search is going coming along slowly, as it always does. I have been working the heck out of networking some of our local sites to connect with potential subjects. Monday I had three, but it all seems to take time. My goal is to begin working on new images next week, in the meantime I have become obsessed with networking and rallying with my artist friends and organizing and cleaning through the files on my computer, an arduous task I always do this time of the year when everything else slows down and I have some time.

I have always felt my art is collaboration. Working in theater was certainly a collaboration. When I work with a model; it’s us coming together to create the image. I always value others input into whatever I do. I think I am very good at taking criticism, and it becomes one of the greatest tools for growth and finding new inspirations. I don’t necessarily allow it to define my direction, but I do ponder the relevance of what is said and consider the source of its origin. I know the value of others experience and insight and hope and respect that they will treat me as fair as I will treat them. My life has been defined by my ability to adapt and change. I look to many sources for inspiration. I used to love to look at magazines and tear out the pages of images that excited me. I collected all kinds of images. Now that inspiration is the Internet. Sometimes I am drawn to just a line in the image: a texture, a color, a style, an eyebrow, a face, a pose, a connection, and a look. When I begin to work with new models I always suggest they begin to collect images they relate to, bring them in, and this become the basis for a common visual dialogue that becomes the basis from which to leap. It brings us to the same page. I am a very visual person and have a studio full of books and other visual references that fill my “creative well” from which I can draw. I don’t imitate others but rather draw and build upon them. I explore how it relates to my style and then find what will make it unique to me.

One of my new goals since I have begun this project, is to look at one new artist each day, connect with that artist and begin developing a relationship and dialog with someone outside of my world. To create a collective, yes sort of like the Borg, to learn and assimilate what wisdom and inspiration they may have and to impart some of that experience into these daily blogs. Thank you Internet! There is already a great host of artist residing in cyberspace on a site called Red Bubble. I joined it one rainy day last May and it has changed my life. I began to slowly filter some of my images, I had been working on in isolation for a decade, onto the site. Mind you no one had seen any of my images, except the individual models I was working with. I was dumbfounded by the response the images received by like minded artist on Red Bubble. Other artists began to comment on what I was doing and giving me feedback. A breathed a deep sigh of relief because I had always feared what the response might be if I ever revealed them publicly.  I live in a place in the universe where a great painting is a landscape with a snow covered mountain in the background. The new connection and feedback from others began to instill a confidence within me. Suddenly I had found a whole world of people who were just like me. I began to correspond and ask questions and make connections. Everyone was so genuine and heartfelt in his or her response and feedback. Then I got busy with all my summer projects and jobs and had to let it fall by the wayside. I tend to over work in the summers, save up and then feel secure enough just to focus on my creativity through the winter.  Hence this project was born. When I occasionally find time in my schedule to work with a model and actually do something artistic for myself, the results was amazing. The new found confidence was helping me to go beyond any thing I had ever created before. Every shoot was a step up from what I had previously done. It was almost like it had some purpose or meaning to what I was creating. It all began to click and I was bringing a remarkable quality into all my other photographic work: weddings, senior portraits, but the nudes are what really popped. So here I am on the precipice of something extraordinary and making the leap. For those who know me, you know my motto has always been, LEAP AND THE NET WILL APPEAR.

I found the perfect picture on Red Bubble this morning that captured that feeling.  BLIND FAITH  I hope Thomas doesn’t mind I made the link.

The bottom image by George Lynn Platt from 1954 became the inspiration for today’s image. Suddenly Dinah Washington came on singing “The World is a Showplace” and I know the universe cosmically is connecting to what I am doing.

I think of this blog as a collaboration. Obviously there are a lot of others drawn into my project and I would like your insight or perspective on topics or interest. We have so much in common that we can share with each other. I would love to hear from you and know more about who’s here. Feel free to ask questions or suggest things you would like to see or issues you would like to see me explore.