Tag Archives: hill

Ohh man!! I havent seen snow like this in Seattle for about ten years! So you know I had to take it as a golden oppurtunity to do some urban snowboarding on Beacon Hill with Jelani..Drove up to Mclellan and ran into some friends who were already a step ahead of us along with the rest of the neighborhood. Gotta love the south end for that! People brought out their inner tubes, stole garbage can lids, and ripped up real estate signs to get their sled on

I cant believe how many people are dumb enough to be driving too! i mean when else are you really going to call in for a snow day? shit…

after that, met up with the homies on Graham and had a snowball fight for like three hours, then people had to get there daily dose of church..thats when me and conrado decided to cut out

i was stranded!!!! man jelani left me on graham and i thought someone else had driven their car to graham but everybody walked! wtf!!!! so we started walking back to conrados crib..which is like 2.5 miles away

yeah thats not so bad but its hella far in snowboard boots!! and hella bus’s were crapped out on the road, like 5 on the walk back..looked like a scene from I Am Legend or something

cut down columbia street and decided to get some pho (energy booster)

i hate pho (and im vietnamese)

finally got to conrados, watched some tv, drank some heineken, and ate some pancit!! (never too full for filipino food)

woke up..ate some more pancit and then headed out on our quest to salvation

waited at the bus stop on ranier, two bus’s passed because they were full, then finally got on the third bus, got off jackson and departed

ive been trying to get my ninja with taking purely candid photos of strangers, although i do try to balance what is moral and immoral about it..at the end of the day, im taking a picture they never knew had existed and most likely will never see..and hopefully when they do, theyll call me and hire me for a job

then kicked it solo in chinatown and finally caught the 150 back to my lair

i wish i had more interesting stuff to say but im just trying to enjoy the snow as much as possible right now

my hands were freezing their hairs off taking flicks so i stopped with that although im trying to take some more shots to mess with on photoshop over break

hope you’re enjoying the snow as much as i am

Metro Bus

Metro Bus

Metro Bus

Metro Bus

Following People

Following People

Following People

Following People

Chinatown

Chinatown

Chinatown

Chinatown

Chinatown

Chinatown

Ranier

Ranier

Conrado

Conrado

Snow Girl

Snow Girl

Guy

Guy

Ranier

Ranier

Ranier

Ranier

Happiness

Happiness

Fergison

Fergison

Pho!!

Pho!!

Ranier

Ranier

Metro

Metro

ive also gotten more into these motion pics

Trees

Trees

More at: www.flickr.com/canhsolo

Street art blows. That’s basically what it comes down to. It’s sad because as a medium it has so many possibilities, and while everyone is doing it, almost no one is doing it well. What’s more, no one is calling the shit brown. Instead, everyone is getting in magazines with half-baked ideas that have been half-baking for about half a month. Going out one weekend with some wheat paste and your digi-cam doesn’t make you a street artist. Posting it on your blog Monday morning doesn’t make you any good. We need to stop telling kids that what they do is good if it isn’t.

We have to start asking questions and stop accepting everything on the walls as good. We need to ask ourselves why it is important that this is outdoors? Would this be any good if it weren’t? Why does it matter that this is done where and how it was? How is this new and, most importantly, why should I care?

Street art has become the annoying little brother to graffiti. He is the one who saw something cool, but couldn’t quite pull it off, so he came up with a lame knockoff to impress his friends. The reason most street art sucks is because it is trying to be what it is not. Street art is NOT graffiti, so why treat it like it is? Designing a poster or a sticker with your image on, having 500 made and putting them up is not a challenge. You want a design challenge? Go tag. Take three to five letters; write them over and over again, outside, illegally. Do it on surfaces not meant to be written on with a medium not designed for writing. Do it for years while trying not to get caught and, on top of that, make it look good. Come back and then we can talk about design challenges. Street art practitioners should have different goals for a different medium. Quit stepping on graffiti’s toes, there are new challenges and new directions you can to go in.

Too much energy is being spent on making vinyl toys and painting on sneakers instead of actually innovating on the street. Street art should at least be outside. Stop selling us snake oil and give us the real shit.

Okay, you say, but kids are still going to do street art. Fine, so do it, just try to do something new and not something that has been done better before. Take something that hasn’t been taken, and take it somewhere different. Take a risk or two. Just don’t expect anyone to like it.

WE’RE NOT PRO-GRAFFITI / ANTI-STREET ART

We’re not pro-graffiti, anti-street art. A lot of people think we are. We think a lot of those people didn’t really read what we said in our statement, but perhaps it could use some clarification.

We think graffiti is mostly boring. It has sunken into the everyday background of the city; no one notices it anymore. You have to know something about it to be interested. The graffiti that gets the most attention is the non-traditional stuff, work that stands out and grabs the public’s attention. Street art has that potential, but it risks losing this edge if the market is flooded with bad, “non-traditional” graffiti in the form of crappy stickers, posters and stencils.

The flip side of this is that what is most interesting about graffiti can also be what makes it so boring. Graffiti has a tradition; it has clearly defined steps and sequences, levels and places it exists. The fact that this tradition was formed by inner-city youth without a profit based motivation and without the goal of a tangible reward is astounding. It was a groundbreaking idea and phenomenon. Now, thirty-odd years later, the tradition still exists in practice, but graffiti has been put in its place. It has lost its potency. It has been relegated to certain neighborhoods where it is allowed to exist, places where if it is not tolerated, it is not buffed. The initial mode of being seen that accompanied the movement, namely the trains, has been co-opted by advertisers and is no longer a viable way for writers to get up. Trains are painted today because of the tradition, not as a means to get noticed by the public. Graffiti today is an undeniable fact of the city, and while graffiti still is a form of rebellion, people are no longer surprised to see it. In this way, society has accepted it.

Street art lacks this limitation in that it has the potential, to stick out in to the non-initiated viewer. Our apprehension comes from the fact that street art is doing nothing different than graffiti, only it lacks the ingenuity. It is being used, by some, strictly as a medium for getting up. It exists almost exclusively in the hip, rapidly gentrifying neighborhoods of the city and is done mostly by art school kids. “Street art” is not the voice of the ghetto, it is not the voice of the voiceless.

Neither is graffiti today, really, but that is another topic. Our point is that tagging, as an action and a medium, has got to be one of the greatest design challenges of the late 20th century. Take five letters, make them look good, then go and write them big, bold and everywhere, illegally. As it has evolved, graffiti has expanded out of the ghettos and into art school. Most good art school taggers at least try to raise the bar, to have their graffiti benefit from their education as well as the tradition. Is it the same game as the kids in the Bronx were playing in ’78? Nope, but it acknowledges the work they did and admires the effort. Some kid sitting at home designing a sticker in Illustrator, then paying to have them printed and putting them up, while it may be a good design formally, has nothing on tagging; it benefits from it’s legacy yet ignores the craft and risk that is critical to the tradition. What is frustrating is that this kid can get fame in books and on the Internet because it is this new medium and market we call street art. Through self-promotion and stamp licking, this kid becomes famous because of his networking, not the net worth of his workings. It is co-opting the hard work of graffiti without the risk and with an ignorance of the tradition.

How many times have you seen some shitty paste-up over a fill-in? In the graffiti tradition, it’s grounds for beef. In street art, it is a prized commodity because the flick looks like you did your thing in the city, in a rough neighborhood with real graffiti. Graffiti is not a gritty urban backdrop for your poster, it is graffiti, and it is someone the voice of someone else. Beef with it if you got beef with it, go over it if you want, but be clear you are going over it, and unless it’s beef, at least try to top it.

Does this mean street art should only exist within the tradition and rules of graffiti? No, exactly the opposite, it should recognize the tradition and then acknowledge the differences. Does this mean graffiti and street art can’t co-exist? No, but the inherent differences should be recognized and street artists should try to capitalize on them as opposed to trying to do graffiti with stickers and stencils.

read more at: http://www.streetartblows.com/

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I’d pretty much have to agree with most of what is stated above, it’s so true. Most street art sucks! capitol hill especially

the snow is like the fog, you’ve got to take advantage of it but man does the pressure from that can get cold, cold enough to just say fuck it, i dont even wanna finish. i nearly got frost bite on my fingers, thats all bad news..and with it being so damn cold at night, its still HOT out! so watch your back

school, school, school

its going!!!

ive been doing shitloads of senior photos, ill post some later..gettin my grind on you know, gettin paid, gettin stacks and bundles..okay not really, but atleast im doing what i love

yesterday!!! i had the oppurtunity to shoot Kore-Ionz and Bob Marley’s Original Wailers!!!! probably the closest ill ever be to hearing the legend live…so amazing..especially when they got to three little birds

okay so, usually when i shoot shows, im always upfront, closest to the stage..for hoursssssssss

that comes with the territory

but THIS IS THE FIRST TIME EVER!!!! that canh solo has experienced groupie loving

so 5 minutes before kore ionz goes on, this blonde chick comes up to me..reaaaaal close

“so whats that ginormous camera for? you shooting the band?”

uhhh…yeah

“like are you from a newspaper or magazine or something?”

uhmm..not really…freelance, they asked me to come here

“right on right on, thats so bad ass”

*gets closer*

“so can you introduce me to the band?”

uh..no

“thats a really big camera”

*after show is over backstage*

“theres a really sweet little girl outside who wants you guys to sign her t shirt”

*girl comes in*

“ITS HER!!!!!!!!”

“so do you guys like want me to take off my shirt so you can sign it?”

everybody looks around like wtf

“keep your shirt on”

Original Wailers

Original Wailers

Original Wailers

Original Wailers

Original Wailers

Original Wailers

Original Wailers

Original Wailers

Original Wailers

Original Wailers

Original Wailers

Original Wailers

check this out..

Original Wailers

Original Wailers

i also met a couple dressed as zombies in the crowd, asked them if they were going to the thriller dance that was taking place today in pioneer square

they said they werent, but apparantely, it was for their wedding rehearsal! theyre gettng married on halloween, at a cemetary..they were so cute, ahahah i had to ask them if they had a wedding photographer

and i said that i’d gladly do it for free if it was themed and they would be dressed as zombies

im excited for that!

Announcer Guy

Announcer Guy

this guy was kind enough to make the announcement to the crowd

Kore-Ionz

Kore-Ionz

Kore-Ionz

Kore-Ionz

Kore-Ionz

Kore-Ionz

Kore-Ionz

Kore-Ionz

The asian dude, yeah, he’s japanese..and from hawaii, amazing person..his name is Pak

i met him through a program i went to in high school called TSB

very talented man, plays almost every instrument on the earth..except for the canhograph

god..im tired, ill update some more later