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Category Archives: Environment
Sim para o Português. BBC Brasil publishes Avantgarb{age}.
You can blame Google Translator if my ‘Yeah for Portuguese,’ above in the title, didn’t quite come out correctly. I don’t yet speak the language, but feeling a little motivated to learn today. I’ve been in contact with a writer over at the BBC Brasil website for the past week or so about running images from the Avantgarb{age}, The Art In Wearing Trash project and today the images were published.
You can check out the selection of images at the BBC Brasil site by clicking on the photo below (and after that take a look at the full project here).
In the news
…and in other news…
I’ve always payed attention to the way newsmen and women, change from one story to another. There has to be this acceptable bridge between a story of sadness to say, the joviality of sports. Is that where the weather comes in? Probably. Btw… it is cold in Valparaiso, Chile. I bought a hat yesterday because I have realized summer trip packing has been trumped by mother nature.
Before I go offline for a whole 2 days (yeah, better than nothing) for a little battery recharging, I wanted to post the latest news about Avantgarb{age} on Treehugger.com. Check out the slideshow here and while you’re at it, see what local BA writer Paula Alvarado is covering.
The Satisfaction in Touch
I held it in my hands yesterday. After a year. Working sporadically at times, I’ll admit. Working in a flurry right at the end. Having it mailed to Argentina. Missing the Fedex folks the first time. Giving up my Wednesday to make sure I was home the second time.
I hesitated. I created the book in Indesign, checked the bleed and the trim and every other number a million and one times. Or more. But I hesitated. I converted it to pdf, uploaded it and sent it out of my hands to be printed. Now it was back in my hands. Physically in existence. No longer images on my computer. It was in the box. I stopped hesitating.
The cover came out as the numbers said they would. The pages also. The binding stretched gracefully as I opened it for the first time. Flipped through each page. Details were in the places I put them, the way I put them. The photos amazing. The pages smooth and the smell of a new book lingered.
It was a year’s worth of work condensed to a 75-page, 8×10 glossy package. It was the idea that sparked the project. The clothing designed by Aidana. The photo sessions with our models. The hours of post-processing, editing, re-editing, layout and design. It was a physical thing. Real. And it was satisfaction that I held in my hands yesterday.
________
A project takes on its own life
or at least its own blog.
The Avantgarb{age} series, which started here on this blog as the Trash Fashion series with Argentine designer Aidana Baldassarre now has its own web space, Avantegarb{age}
We’ve finished shooting, finished processing (sort-of) and we’ve even put together a small sample book to ship around. Most importantly, we’ve started contacting publishers. I approach this stage with the blissful ignorance of one avoiding the reality of book publishing and jumping in despite the sharks in the water.
The mantra: What does it hurt to try? Which translates we’ll be sending out proposals, even without that golden personal contact inside the organization.
So, well that sort of brings me to a request. If you like the work (or not) and have a contact inside a publishing company, we’d be grateful for the information. You can email me directly at cate (at) cateincba (dot) com.
Will we miss it? BAD2009
It begins with a crack in the formidable Patagonian glacier. A fissure appears as the ice shifts, slides, moves onward. Exposed beneath the white surface is the cool blue of ice, compressed over the years. Newly exposed, beaten by the sun, it begins to melt, the fissure widens, deepens. It happens quickly, without warning, no map, no way to know where to see such beauty. We walk the ice, trek the seracs looking for the birth of blue.
But, will we miss it?
The blue fades, retreats, pulls back from humanity. Its beauty lost to the generations that come. Photographs remind us, but we can not touch the ice, feel the cool blueness, run out hands over the rough, wind pocketed outer-surface or slide between the icy peaks. The intricate beauty of abstract forms, of cracks in the ice, of water so cool, so clear, so pure, gone. Restricted to two-dimensional paper, bits and bytes of the computer. A grandness reduced to numbers, reduced to being filed away and a faded memory.
Water escapes us, we thirst. The glaciers that supplied our water and our lives are gone. Melted. Less snow, more heat, no accumulation, no rebirth. The fissure widens, deepens. But it is not the birth of blue that arrives. It is the death of the glacier. One crack at a time. It is the death of us. One drop of water at a time. Melting.
Yes. We will miss it.
______
The point and purpose of Blog Action Day 2009 is to bring awareness to climate change. With over 7,000 bloggers registered, the electric ether seeks to correct our ignorance and obstinacy. To keep us from ignoring the signs, from losing such integral parts of our planet as a glacier.
We will miss it.
When the glaciers are gone, we will miss them. For their beauty, for their water, for their climate control.
So what can we do before we miss it, before we miss our opportunity? December 7th, 2009 in Copenhagen many in the world, including some of our leaders will gather for the United Nations Climate Change Conference where they will be negotiating to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. This is our opportunity.
Tell them we will miss it. The glacier. The water. The beauty.
I have no head for numbers. I see blue fields of ice, not the rate of retraction. I see awesome peaks of accumulated snow, not the decrease in precipitation. But after touching it and trekking it, I know I’ll miss it. But if you want the maps and percentages and the stuff that should give us all nightmares, download the Greenpeace Argentina report, Futuro Negro para los Glaciares (obviously written in Spanish).
And don’t miss it.
Below are a small selection of images I’ve taken throughout Patagonia. If just to remind you of the beauty we’d all miss.
Blog Action Day 2009
Coming soon. October 15, 2009
See last year’s 2008 Blog Action Day post on poverty: The Human Element: Poverty is not a series of statistics.
IPA Awards

This is one in the series of five images I entered. My favorite by far.
Two posts in one day makes for an active Friday.
This email from the International Photography Awards arrived just under two weeks ago.
Congratulations. Your entry ‘The Birth of Blue ‘ has advanced through the second round and is now in the third and final round of the jurying process. Your entry is now an official Honorable Mention of the 2009 International Photography Awards.
I did not make it any further, but I’m very glad to have made it this far. You can check out the final winners here.
The Birth of Blue
Recently I partnered with Wallblank to sell one of my images. Actually I had contacted them about a month or so ago with some samples and then received an email Sunday evening asking me if I could have an image ready to go by Monday morning. Not a problem, but that also means titling it and writing a description. Many years in newspapers and countless editors ‘politely’ reminding me of deadlines serves a purpose still. I love being creative on deadline (and no, I’m not being sarcastic).
From that was born The Birth of Blue. One image available for sale which lead to a series of images all taken while trekking several glaciers in Patagonia this past March 2009.
The surreal dreamy quality most appeals to me in this series and my focus was to be more abstract.
The Birth of Blue is the hint of blue in some images, the overwhelming blue of others. It is the color of the sky, the color of compressed ice, the color of hidden lagunas, the color of dreams…
Patagonia 2
I have more images from my recent trip south. Some are not the Patagonia you would like to see.
Roaming through El Calafate, TJ and I came upon the city dump. The winds in Patagonia are well known for their ferocity and frequency. Trash does not stay put, but instead has collected for as far as I could see in fences and bushes.
On the plus side when we went to the local supermarket they no longer give you plastic bags for your goceries. You bring your own or grab a box. In the stores we were also given paper bags, not plastic.
I guess you have to start somewhere.





