Artists across the US grapple with an unforgiving housing market

Artists across the US grapple with an unforgiving housing market

Artists nationwide are struggling to find affordable housing and studio space as housing prices and inflation skyrocket. Artists, who are routinely used as a tool of gentrification, also contribute essential work for the community that helps provide catharsis in times of turmoil. Many artists say they simply can’t create without affordable housing or studio space. Arts organizations are attempting to find a solution to the unrealistic housing and rental markets by creating their own housing, like PushPush in Atlanta, or by offering housing-specific stipends like in South Florida, where Oolite Arts announced an annual $12,000-a-year housing stipend for their artists-in-residence who are based in Miami.

“I went to school in Baltimore at the Maryland Institute College of Art, and after I finished my studies, I decided to move back to Miami. It is where I was born and raised. It’s where my family resides, and it’s where I draw a lot of my inspiration from my art practice,” Diana Eusebio, an Oolite artist in residence said. “I think there is a growing amount of opportunities when it comes to the arts, but a lack of sustainability when it comes to our lifestyle. There’s a passionate pool of people that are born and raised here that are choosing Miami, but they can’t afford to live here.”

Applications open July 12 for the 2024 residency at Oolite Arts. To qualify for the Knight Artist Housing Stipend as part of the Studio Residency, artists must show proof that they have lived in Miami-Dade for two years at the start of the residency in January 2024. 

Organizations in other cities are also working to meet artists’ housing needs. PushPush Arts, an arts incubator that has been promoting and supporting the arts in Atlanta for 25 years, will offer affordable housing, art studios, galleries, stages, and community art spaces in an adaptive reuse arts campus. Residents can rent or own property in the arts complex, choosing between $600-900 a month in rent or $155,000 to own. There will be 60 one- and two-bedroom apartments available. The space is set to open sometime before the holiday season.

“I kept talking to people who were having a hard time finding rent … It started getting to be where a single apartment was $1,800, and artists’ support is pretty low in Atlanta,” said Tim Habeger, co-director of PushPush Arts. “So that’s what really got us thinking that if we were going to attract and retain artists here in Atlanta that we were going to have to do something about getting them living spaces.”

According to Habeger, the space was supported by Tapestry Development, a low-income housing tax credit developer dedicated to preserving low-income housing in Georgia, Alabama, and South Carolina.

Without housing, artists are forced to find alternatives.

“​Artists are often the vanguard, and then the victims of this gentrification tsunami,” said Colin K. Gray, who created the 2021 documentary “Unzipped: An Autopsy of American Inequality” about affordable housing in Venice, California. The film spotlights artist families who are struggling to remain in their neighborhood, which has since fallen victim to gentrification “They are part of the fabric of these communities; they helped make a place rich and culturally diverse and cool and vibrant, and then they’re often the ones who are [later displaced] because they don’t have that same kind of steady income as other people do. It brings up big questions about what is the value of art? What is the value of art and artists in our community?”

The average rent in Venice for a one-bedroom apartment is about $3,300 as of July 6, although average rent prices reached nearly $4,000 in May, precluding up-and-coming artists from being able to afford living in the community. In Los Angeles County, approximately 600,000 people live in households that spend more than 90% of income on rent. According to Gray, this is a rent crisis. 

“We’re going to need to rethink how we make it possible for artists to remain in these kinds of communities like in Venice, California, and in Miami,” Gray said. “It’s very difficult to find communities where they can afford to rent and chase their art and their dreams and career.”

That goal is at the heart of the organizing work by artist Pangea Kali Virga. The recent closure of Fountainhead Studios in Little Haiti, an affordable studio space for 30 artists in Miami, has pushed Virga to organize locals to try to find a new space. Virga, who was paying $600 a month for a studio space in Fountainhead, has been working out of her studio in limbo until they are given a 60-day notice to evacuate the facility. When she heard the news that they would have to leave, Virga decided to form an artist cooperative and try to acquire property.

“There are so many artists who need studios, or at the very least want community,” Virga said. “We really want to make it accessible for people who can’t afford studio spaces all the time.”

Virga says the project is temporarily on pause while they strategize fundraising and organizing with other artists who will be displaced by the Fountainhead shutdown. Meanwhile, in Venice, Gray spent two years tracking the housing journeys of two artist families. One family was able to find supportive housing and shelter, and the other was eventually evicted.

“It was a really tough film to make because we were not only documenting the families, but then we were talking to different stakeholders in the community, some very pro-housing, some very resistant to it,” said Gray. “It was really sad and sobering to see the amount of vitriol that was directed at them.”

As Miami officially becomes the least affordable housing market in the country, the local artists who built Miami’s vibrant and diverse artist enclave are being priced out of their studios and homes and say living and working in Miami is simply not sustainable anymore. 

Franky Cruz, a Dominican Republic-born multidisciplinary artist who was predominantly based in Miami, has been struggling to find stable housing and studio space for more than a year in the city. Cruz was part of a wave of graffiti and street artists who helped popularize the street art movement in Wynwood in the early aughts. But the once Puerto Rican neighborhood soon fell victim to a similar pattern of art-washing-based gentrification. Now, the neighborhood boasts some of the least affordable housing in the city with a median rental price of $3,950.

Cruz rented a studio in Little Haiti for years, but he decided he needed to move in 2021 after someone was shot outside the studio and his rent was increased. Neither condition was conducive to creating work for him.

“It’s kind of amazing that I was able to even make work in that environment,” said Cruz, who raises native butterflies as part of an ongoing project called the Vivarium Meconium Laboratory. “I was able to raise 3,000 butterflies during this whole process. I can’t imagine what I would have, or what I’m going to do once I find a place where I can have my own garden.”

After Cruz left his Little Haiti studio, the artist slept in his car for two weeks and camped for another two weeks in the Everglades until he could find another studio and housing space.

“It’s an interesting social experiment, going from living in your car to a tent, and even in that chaos, still making work,” said Cruz. “I’m not going to stop making artwork no matter what the situation is. It just doesn’t let me focus on my main body of work, which is the Vivarium Meconium Lab, which is still active but not where it needs to be.”

Cruz raises native butterflies inside of a geodesic dome he designed filled with other native and pollinator plants. Once the caterpillars become chrysalids, he rigs them above watercolor paper. After a week of metamorphosis, they emerge and release a liquid, meconium, which is captured in the watercolor paper as its own form of pigment. The result is an imprint of the butterfly’s journey of self-transformation before Cruz releases them back into the urban ecosystem where they will contribute to the cycle of life. But, without sufficient space, the dome is boarded up in a storage unit until Cruz can find a stable place to settle. Currently, he calls himself nomadic and is traveling outside of Miami until something stable materializes.

“I know a lot of talent that has left from the city that we would benefit from having here,” said Cruz. “I’m not the only one who is talking about leaving, who is leaving.”

misael soto, an interdisciplinary artist whose work is driven by community and the systems to which society is beholden, has been organizing artists through monthly meetings to address each others’ needs and support each other, including signing letters in solidarity with artists who have been fired from their institutions or are not being paid an equitable rate.

“Myself and a lot of other artists here have been paying attention and expressing certain needs that aren’t being filled by anyone and really just feeling like no one knows what we need better than ourselves,” said soto. “So, thinking about how can we best serve ourselves. It’s just a very classic kind of collectivizing mentality of strength in numbers.”

Their current goal is to create and conduct an artist census. Inspired by the Los Angeles Artist Census, spearheaded by Tatiana Vahan, soto hopes to collect data about the community’s needs. Vahan’s work studies artists’ experiences with affordable housing, income security, debt, education, and access to health care. LAAC also examines how intersectional identities pertaining to race, gender, age, queerness, and ability relate to disparities in quality of life and professional development among artists. The census found that in 2019, 16% of artists surveyed made $20,000-30,000 annually. Thirty percent of respondents reported they went without basic needs and necessities due to lack of funds in 2018-19. Of these respondents, 44% were transgender or nonbinary, and 42% were Black. 

“In Tatiana’s words, a census can really shine light where there’s darkness. This is information that we just don’t have, and that is by design,” said soto. “Collectors, institutions don’t want the greater public to know how bad it is for us.”

soto has been carefully working on establishing a team that will help with outreach and another that will work on marketing and design while making sure the questions are thoughtful.

“These questions are prying; they can be personal, so we really want to get them right,” said soto. “Just knowing that something like this exists in a city where I haven’t heard of anything like this existing ever, at least that isn’t attached to any kind of developer or institution or grant … I’m excited that it’s finally happening. It’s given me a bit of faith.”

How to take food photography to the next level with your iPhone’s camera

How to take food photography to the next level with your iPhone’s camera

Taking the perfect food photo is a brilliant way to entice an audience with an iPhone, whether you’re selling a product, trying to pick up extra views on social media, or simply looking to share some food highlights with close friends and family. And let’s be honest here, who doesn’t like to look at food?

But, while the food you’ve made or ordered can look like an indulgent treat in person, thanks to awkward lighting, unfortunate surroundings, or even excess steam, the once-gooey pizza pics you had in mind can turn into greasy cheesy nightmares you may want to hide in your photo stream rather than post online. 

Plus, finding what works for you in a sea of influencers, editing apps, staging tips, and sets can get overwhelming. In this guide, we’ll uncover the untapped potential that can be found in your iPhone’s camera, as well as run through some essential tips and tricks you can utilize when selling your menus and taking great food photography.

Set the table and the scene

Table of food taken with iPhone

(Image credit: iMore)

Staging a scene can often make the most difference when taking food photography, and if utilized properly, it can even become a signature to your brand, channel, or style. A brilliant starting point when seeking out this element of the food photography process is first to browse online and mark the photos you find compelling or enticing. Because style is so subjective, it will be about finding the framing and lighting that appeals to you and what you want to emulate in your work and building your own visual identity from there.

A quick glance on Instagram will show a wide array of techniques to dabble in. From panning video content that uses heavy flash lighting to meticulously staged cookbook portrait photos, cycling through and finding what appeals can help you hone in on the style you want to go for. For businesses and blogs, having a consistent grid on your Instagram or TikTok is something that appeals to users and can give you ar professional ambiance, creating a clear message for your brand. So it’s key that you find a general style to start with, but never be afraid to experiment and freshen things up.

Once you have a great idea of what you’d like to create, it’s always recommended to take a dive into your settings first to make sure you are shooting in the best quality before jumping in. While some third-party apps offer their own camera options, I’d always recommend using the Camera app itself to capture the media and then upload them for the best quality images.

iPhone 14 Pro with camera app on screen sitting on wooden table

(Image credit: iMore)

To access your Camera settings, open the Settings app and select Camera. Within this submenu, you’ll see all manner of settings to toggle with, each offering a benefit to your photo-taking escapades. Firstly, tap Record Video. When shooting for Instagram or TikTok, there are quality limitations that can mean 4K resolution capture is unnecessary, so choosing the lower quality option saves room on your precious internal storage. In this menu, you’ll see a list of resolutions to choose from. Shooting in 1080p at 60 frames per second is a smart choice, as this is a good standard to maintain across the board.

For the food photography itself, the iPhone’s base settings are worth digging into. One helpful tool you can toggle on to assist with consistency in your shots is the Grid, a cross-hatch overlay that can help you when you’re framing your shots. You can find this option within the Camera settings menu and tap to turn it on. When shooting, the grid will clearly outline a central box to frame the food more easily. You want to have your subject front and center, but once again, don’t be afraid to get creative with grid placement.

The Grid can be a great tool to use in tandem with the iPhone’s manual focus system, which will anchor the perspective of the camera to the item of your choice in the scene. To assert control over your camera’s autofocus, all you need to do is tap the screen where you want the camera to focus when taking a photo or a video.

Hungry friends and hot food

Once you’ve got to grips with a style and figured out your settings, there are some remediable food-based issues to contend with that can cause trouble for your photographic endeavors.

Coping with steam is a classic foodie photo-taking complaint and one that is mostly unavoidable, especially with piping hot food. The best and easiest way to deal with steam is to make the most of it and find a way to include it in your shot. Not only can this make the food look inviting, but the image can be edited to look even more moody after the fact. By stepping away and angling the camera vertically, you can capture the dish with steam whilst giving your iPhone’s camera the space not to fog up.

Another important consideration is the lens focus, though, as the moving steam may draw its attention. To mitigate this, tap the food on the preview and let the camera correct its focal point. You’ll likely need to do this a few times to achieve a clear image. Make use of dark backgrounds to amplify the contrast where possible too.

BBQ Pizza at Dough Loco in Lincoln

(Image credit: Dough Loco)

Lighting and Flash

Another common grievance in food photography is dimly-lit restaurants and environments with difficult lighting. In this case, there are two paths you can take; the first is to commit to your flash. This stylistic choice can deliver some glossy photos that show off the sheen of a dish, which is useful if that’s the sort of up-close style you’re going for.

If you’re looking for a more soft, subtle shot, then Apple’s Night Mode feature can do the trick. Night Mode will turn on automatically when your iPhone camera is in low light and is signified by a yellow half-moon icon at the top right of the Camera app interface, right next to the flash. 

To use this feature, make sure you tap the display to set a clear focal point and hold the phone still as it takes the photo. The result will be an image with soft lighting that can show off the finer notes of your food. This is especially helpful when you want to avoid that oily or greasy that can be exacerbated by flash photography. 

Where you can, natural light will always be king, of course. In my own photography, soft cloudy sunlight, like that found on a kitchen bench, tends to provide the cleanest image. Setting a plate just out of direct sunlight can achieve that perfect brunch shot that will highlight the lighter tones without making them overexposed.


Cook, capture, repeat

BBQ Chicken Wrap at a coffee shop in Lincoln

(Image credit: iMore)

Now that you’ve read our tips on how to contend with steam, low light, and staging, it’s time to head out into the world and take some stylish photos of your food. 

Remember to experiment with the settings and find your style, then reflect that on your social media grids to give users an aesthetic vision they’ll want to keep coming back to.

Cheyenne River Youth Project’s RedCan 2023 wraps up tomorrow

Cheyenne River Youth Project’s RedCan 2023 wraps up tomorrow

JULY 7, 2023:

The 10 guest artists at the Cheyenne River Youth Project’s 9th annual RedCan invitational graffiti jam were expected to complete their large-scale murals in the city of Eagle Butte yesterday (July 6, 2023), supported by volunteer assistants and local youth artists. While they paint, volunteers from Ursuline College and the University of Missouri-St. Louis will be hosting arts and crafts activities for youth ages 4-12 at two select community sites.

This morning, the action will shift to CRYP’s Waniyetu Wowapi (Winter Count) Art Park for the final two days of the four-day, award-winning event. In addition to mural painting and youth art activities, the schedule on Friday and Saturday also includes art classes with RedCan guest instructors, traditional Lakota dancing, hoop dancing classes, games, community meals, and live music and performances.

RedCan 2023 Schedule:

Friday, July 7: Waniyetu Wowapi Art Park, CRYP Campus

(Google Maps/GPS: 101 East Lincoln Street)

11 a.m.: Cloud dough and sidewalk chalk

11 a.m.: Lakota Dance Exhibition

2 p.m.: Field Day games, friendship bracelets

3 p.m.: Skateboard painting with Biafra and Wundr, spray painting with 179, earring making with Reed Two Bulls

6 p.m.: “Build Your Own Fiesta Bowl/Burrito” — community meal hosted by USML volunteer group

7 p.m.: Live music! Lakota rock band The Wake Singers on the Waniyetu Wowapi Art Park stage

Saturday, July 8: Waniyetu Wowapi Art Park, CRYP Campus

11 a.m.: Design Your Own Superhero: mask, cape, bookmark; “Calm Down” jars

2 p.m.: Slime-making

2 p.m.: Hoop-dancing workshop with The Sampson Brothers

3 p.m.: Skateboard painting with Biafra and Wundr, spray painting with 179, earring making with Reed Two Bulls

4 p.m.: Water Field Day: capture the waterfall (flag), water target practice, frozen T-shirts, water slide kickball

6 p.m.: Community dinner hosted by CRYP staff

7 p.m.: Live performances from Lakota rap artist Bazille and acclaimed hoop dancers The Sampson Brothers on the Waniyetu Wowapi Art Park stage

The Cheyenne River-based Wakinyan Maza drum group will open and close each day of RedCan with a prayer, smudging and drum song at CRYP’s Čhokáta Wičhóni (Center of Life) teen center for all who wish to participate.

To learn more about this year’s RedCan artists and performers, and to make a tax-deductible contribution to support RedCan 2023, visit www.lakotayouth.org/redcan.

Courtesy photo.

JULY 5, 2023:

The 9th annual RedCan invitational graffiti jam is just one week away, and CRYP staff and volunteers are preparing to welcome artists, performers and guests to the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation for four days of art, culture and connection. The first and only event of its kind in Indian Country, the award-winning RedCan event is this week (July 5-8, 2023), and is free and open to the public.

This year’s featured artists are East, Cyfi, Hoka, Biafra, Wundr, 179, Lawst, Lucious, Rezmo, TamiJoy, Yukue, and Desi Mundo. During the four painting days, each artist will work closely with a CRYP Lakota Art Fellow or teen intern, giving the community’s young people valuable opportunities to learn new skills, practice new techniques, and connect with Native and non-Native artists from around the country.

The action begins on July 5-6, when the 12 artists will be painting large-scale murals at select sites across the city of Eagle Butte — transformative public art that will bring Lakota stories, language and values to life. While the featured artists paint in the community, volunteers from Ursuline College and the University of Missouri-St. Louis will be offering youth activities at Dairy Queen, 24325 U.S. Hwy 212, and at the apartment complex on Main Street between H and G streets, where last year’s “Mitákuye Oyás’iŋ” RedCan mural is located.

On Friday and Saturday, July 7-8, all the action will be centered in the Waniyetu Wowapi (Winter Count) Art Park. In addition to the mural painting and youth art activities, the schedule in the art park also includes traditional Lakota dancing, hoop dancing classes, games, and refreshments.

CRYP will close each of these painting days with a free community meal and special live performances. The Wake Singers, an Olgala Lakota rock band comprising cousins Douglas, Michael and Reed Two Bulls, will take the Waniyetu Wowapi stage on Friday.

Cheyenne River Lakota and Crow Creek Dakota rap artist, producer and sound designer Bazille will perform Saturday evening. Afterward, CRYP will welcome renowned Mvskoke Creek/Seneca hoop dancers The Sampson Brothers for the final performance of RedCan 2023.

RedCan 2023 Schedule:

July 5

11 a.m.: Animal magnets and take-home trivets at Mitákuye Oyás’iŋ apartments

2 p.m. Beaded bracelets and washer necklaces at Dairy Queen

July 6

11 a.m.: Watercolor silhouettes, watercolor string art, watercolor with crayon at Mitákuye Oyás’iŋ apartments

2 p.m.: Spin art and summer spinners at Dairy Queen

July 7

11 a.m.: Cloud dough and galaxy jars

11 a.m.-2 p.m.: Lakota Dance Exhibition

6 p.m.: “Build Your Own Fiesta Bowl or Burrito” — community meal hosted by USML volunteer group

7 p.m.: Live performance from the Wake Singers

July 8

11 a.m.: Design your own superhero: mask, cape, bookmark; sock animals

11 a.m.-2 p.m.: Lakota Dance Exhibition

2 p.m.: Make your own slime, “Calm Down” jars

2 p.m.: Hoop-dancing workshop

4 p.m.: Water Field Day: capture the waterfall (flag), water target practice, frozen T-shirts, water slide kickball

6 p.m.: Community meal hosted by Wokicik’u Catering, a Rosebud Indian Reservation-based business owned by Franky Young.

7 p.m.: Live performances from Bazille and the Sampson Bros.

As always, the Cheyenne River-based Wakinyan Maza drum group will open and close each day of RedCan with a prayer, smudging and drum song at CRYP’s Čhokáta Wičhóni (Center of Life) teen center for all who wish to participate.

To learn more about this year’s RedCan artists and performers, and to make a tax-deductible contribution to support RedCan 2023, visit www.lakotayouth.org/redcan.
And to learn more about the Cheyenne River Youth Project and its programs, and for information about making donations and volunteering, call (605) 964-8200 or visit www.lakotayouth.org. And, to stay up to date on the latest CRYP news and events, follow the youth project on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube.

MAY 29, 2023:

In less than two months, the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation will be ground zero for the 9th annual RedCan invitational graffiti jam, the first and only event of its kind in Indian Country. RedCan is scheduled for July 5-8, 2023, and is open to the public.

The Cheyenne River Youth Project announced the names of the 12 featured artists who will paint murals around the Eagle Butte community on July 5-6 and in CRYP’s public Waniyetu Wowapi (Winter Count) Art Park on July 7-8. The grassroots, Native- and woman-led nonprofit organization also unveiled a short film about the RedCan project titled “Changing the Narrative.”

“Five of our 2022 featured artists were Native women, and all five are returning this year,” said Julie Garreau, CRYP’s executive director. “We are excited to amplify their voices, perspectives and gifts through this little film, just as we are honored to welcome them back to Cheyenne River for four more days of creation, connection, cultural exchange, and the healing, transformative power of art.”

Those artists are 179, Lucious, Rezmo, TamiJoy and Yukue. Also part of the Redcan 2023 lineup are East, Cyfi, Hoka, Biafra, Wundr, Lawst and Desi Mundo.

During the four painting days, each artist will work closely with a CRYP Lakota Art Fellow or teen intern. These young Lakota art students will be able to learn new skills and practice new techniques as they assist the artists.

“This mentorship is a vital part of RedCan,” Garreau explained. “Not only does it bring Native and non-Native artists from across the country to our homelands, giving our community members a priceless opportunity to engage with the largest art movement in the history of humankind, it also gives our young people opportunities to explore their identities, share their voices and stories, and grow as artists.”

“I’m excited that even more teens are interested in participating in RedCan this year,” said Wakinyan Chief, CRYP’s art manager. “One of our programs assistant trainees completed several teen internships with us, and he’s heading into his third RedCan. Every couple of weeks, he tells me how much he’s looking forward to this summer’s event.”

Most of the featured artists have participated in multiple RedCans, as well; in fact, some have participated since the inaugural event in 2015. According to Garreau, that has deepened the RedCan experience in ways that she and her staff couldn’t have anticipated in the beginning.

“We’ve seen lifelong friendships develop, and the artists often refer to RedCan as a family,” she said. “That is profoundly moving to all of us at CRYP, because relationships lie at the heart of everything we do. And as we strengthen the bonds between us, we also see beautiful collaborative work develop — particularly between our guest artists, local Cheyenne River artists, and our young art students. It’s such an honor to witness this unfold year after year.”

While the artists paint in the community, CRYP and its volunteers will host youth arts, crafts and recreational activities at dedicated community sites. Then, when the artists move to the art park, the action moves with them.

“In the past, our two days in the art park have included DJ music, Lakota exhibition dancing, field day games, arts activities, hoop-dancing classes, and so much more,” said Jerica Widow, CRYP’s programs director. “It’s a joy to see the kids learning and having fun while family members and guests stroll through the park, enjoy the music and dancing, and watch the artists work.”

Community members also frequently gather at the mural sites in town, and not just the new ones. Garreau noted that, last year, CRYP staff witnessed people stopping at the older murals as well and discussing the details of the artwork with their companions.

“Our community really has embraced RedCan,” she reflected. “Throughout each year, as we drive or walk around town, we see all of this art — literally hundreds of murals since RedCan began — that uplifts us and reflects who we are as Lakota people. It is really powerful.

“For me, it’s a centering point,” she continued. “That’s so important, because the work we do here can be really challenging.”

On Friday and Saturday, July 7-8, CRYP will close each painting day in the art park with a free community meal and special performance on the Waniyetu Wowapi Art Park stage. Cheyenne River Lakota and Crow Creek Dakota rap artist, producer and sound designer Bazille will perform Friday night.

The Wake Singers, an Olgala Lakota rock band comprising cousins Douglas, Michael and Reed Two Bulls, will take the stage on Saturday. And, as always, the Cheyenne River-based Wakinyan Maza drum group will open and close each day of RedCan with a prayer, smudging and drum song for all who wish to participate.

CRYP will share more specific details about this year’s youth activities, community meals, and special performances in June. In the meantime, to view the new “Changing the Narrative” short film, visit CRYP on Vimeo at vimeo.com/lakotayouth (direct link: https://vimeo.com/793015587).
To learn more about this year’s RedCan artists and performers, and to make a tax-deductible contribution to support RedCan 2023, visit www.lakotayouth.org/redcan. All proceeds will be used to purchase paint, artist supplies, food and beverages, and to help cover the artists’ travel expenses.
And to learn more about the Cheyenne River Youth Project and its programs, and for information about making donations and volunteering, call (605) 964-8200 or visit www.lakotayouth.org.

In 2022, acclaimed hoop dancers The Sampson Brothers performed on RedCan’s final evening.
Photo credit Cheyenne River Youth Project.

Featured artists paint at mural sites in the community for RedCan’s first two days, then paint in the art park during the event’s final two days.
Photo credit Cheyenne River Youth Project.

Listen to These Photographs of Sparkling Galaxies

Listen to These Photographs of Sparkling Galaxies
image

Most celestial objects—from stars and nebulas to quasars and galaxies—emit light at a range of wavelengths. Some include visible light, which is how astronomers are able to photograph them with space telescopes like Hubble. But the James Webb Space Telescope and the Chandra X-ray Observatory peer at heavenly objects in infrared and x-ray wavelengths that are invisible to the human eye. That data is often translated into visible colors to produce spectacular space images. Now, a group of astronomers is making those images accessible to a wider audience that includes visually impaired people—by turning the data into almost musical sequences of sounds.

“If you only make a visual of a Chandra image or another NASA image, you can be leaving people behind,” says Kim Arcand, a visualization scientist who collaborates with a small, independent group of astronomers and musicians on a science and art project called SYSTEM Sounds. Arcand, who describes herself as a former choir and band geek, is also the the emerging tech lead for NASA’s Chandra observatory. Until a few years ago, this meant activities like adding sound to virtual- and augmented-reality science outreach programs. Then, along with a few others who became the SYSTEM Sounds group, Arcand began converting x-ray data into audio. “We have had such a positive response from people, both sighted and blind or low vision, that it’s the project that keeps on giving,” she says. Today, the group also works with NASA’s Universe of Learning, a program that provides science education resources.

Visual images from the JWST or Chandra instruments are artificial, in a sense, because they use false colors to represent invisible frequencies. (If you actually traveled to these deep-space locations, they’d look different.) Similarly, Arcand and the SYSTEM Sounds team translate image data at infrared and x-ray wavelengths into sounds, rather than into optical colors. They call these “sonifications,” and they are meant to offer a new way to experience cosmic phenomena, like the birth of stars or the interactions between galaxies.

Translating a 2D image into sounds starts with the image’s individual pixels. Each can contain several kinds of data—like x-ray frequencies from Chandra and infrared frequencies from Webb. These can then be mapped onto sound frequencies. Anyone—even a computer program—can make a 1-to-1 conversion between pixels and simple beeps and boops. “But when you’re trying to tell a scientific story of the object,” Arcand says, “music can help tell that story.”

That’s where Matt Russo, an astrophysicist and musician, comes in. He and his colleagues pick a particular image and then feed the data into sound-editing software that they’ve written in Python. (It works a bit like GarageBand.) Like cosmic conductors, they have to make musical choices: They select instruments to represent particular wavelengths (like an oboe or flute, say, to represent the near-infrared or mid-infrared), and which objects to draw the listener’s attention to, in which order, and at which speed—similar to panning across a landscape.

They lead the listener through the image by focusing attention on one object at a time, or a selected group, so that they can be distinguished from other things in the frame. “You can’t represent everything that’s in the image through sound,” Russo says. “You have to accentuate the things that are most important.” For example, they might highlight a particular galaxy within a cluster, a spiral galaxy’s arm unfurling, or a bright star exploding. They also try to differentiate between a scene’s foreground and background: A bright Milky Way star might set off a crash cymbal, while the light from distant galaxies would trigger more muted notes.

In their latest releases, the team sonified images of a galaxy group called Stephan’s Quintet, as well as of the Sombrero Galaxy (also known as Messier 104) and the variable binary star R Aquarii, which is found in the Aquarius constellation. They used imagery from the JWST, Chandra, Hubble, and NASA’s now-defunct infrared Spitzer Space Telescope.

Stephan’s Quintet resides 290 million light-years from Earth and includes five galaxies, four of which are dancing close together. They’re in the process of flying past each other, disturbing their swirling shapes and stretching out their spiral arms. Images reveal clusters of newly forming stars, and a few spots with stars and dust clouds being pulled away from their host galaxy by the gravity of their neighbors. “We wanted to hear the five members of this quintet. We wanted to hear their relative positions and sizes, but we also wanted to give someone who’s just listening to the image an aesthetic experience of the textures and colors in it,” Russo says. Once they chose their image, he continues, “We decided to scan from the top downwards and to let the brightness in the image control the frequencies of the tones you’re hearing.”

They picked a glass marimba, with its softer sound, to represent infrared wavelengths, and a synthetic violin-like string instrument, with a harsher and brighter sound, for x-rays, so that it’s easier to distinguish the two by ear. As you listen, the first galaxy arrives on the scene, surrounded by the sounds of the distant galaxies behind it. Suddenly its neighboring galaxies emerge, and the cosmic symphony crescendos. Then it gradually tapers off, returning to the fluctuating cacophony of numerous background objects. (You can listen by clicking the player below or following this link.)

The sonification of data from Stephan’s Quintet reveals the richness of activity there, as galaxies in the group dance and stretch each other’s spiral arms.

The team has sonified other astrophysical data as well, including the gravitational wave detections of merging pairs of black holes and neutron stars, and a topographic map of impact craters on the moon. (You can find all of the group’s sonifications here.)

This effort is “an amazing step toward inclusion and access,” says Christine Malec, a blind astronomy buff and longtime musician who became a consultant for SYSTEM Sounds after hearing Russo present some sonifications at a Toronto planetarium. She provides feedback to the group, like whether something in a composition is effective or confusing, or whether there’s something she’d like to hear more or less of. “It’s a profound experience to me, because I can’t look up at the night sky and get other sensory experiences of the cosmos,” she says. “When I listen to a sonification and really try to understand what I’m hearing by reading the explanations, it’s engaging in a visceral way that just reading about things isn’t.”

Malec thinks that these works could be used for educational purposes as well. For example, she says, there’s a lot to learn from the sonification of data from TRAPPIST-1, a solar system with seven known planets that move in resonant orbits, meaning that their orbital periods form ratios of whole numbers. (For every two orbits of the outer planet, the next one inward orbits thrice.) That sonification isn’t actually a translation of a pixelated image. Instead, it turns the planets’ orbits into sound, with a piano note representing each one. The composition starts with the outermost planet and adds one planet at a time. It also uses different drums to signal when each planet passes its outer neighbor, showing the rhythm of their gravitational influences, so that it ends with seven piano notes and six drums.

The orbital periods of the seven known planets in the TRAPPIST-1 system create musical harmony when translated into sounds.

Alicia Aarnio, cofounder of the American Astronomical Society’s working group on accessibility and disability, says that the astronomical community should accept sonifications as legitimate scientific tools. The human eye is valuable for making classifications of objects in space photos, picking out sets of features that computer algorithms can’t do well yet. But using multiple senses can be helpful; ears are sensitive to changes in pitch, just as eyes sense changes in brightness, says Aarnio, an astronomer at University of North Carolina Greensboro. Sonifications have, in fact, already been used for research, including by the astrophysicist Wanda Díaz-Merced, who has been blind since her 20s and now works at the European Gravitational Observatory in Cascina, Italy.

SYSTEM Sounds isn’t the only group trying to make the cosmos audible. A group of researchers at UCLA and NASA have translated space weather signals into sound. In a recent study, other astronomers described sonification software they are developing called Astronify, though it’s designed for 1-dimensional data like light-curve data and spectra, not the 2D images typically used by SYSTEM Sounds.

The SYSTEM Sounds team has surveyed thousands of sighted, low vision, and blind people who listened to their sonifications of space images, and is about to submit a study for peer review showing that the overall response was positive, with people saying the audio pieces made them feel relaxed—but also curious and interested in space science. “When you have deep-space esoteric scientific data of things that sound super abstract—like exploding stars, colliding galaxies, and galaxy clusters—sonifications can bring them down to Earth in a very practical and emotion-driven way,” Arcand says.

The true story behind the conspiracy-ridden murals at Denver International Airport

The true story behind the conspiracy-ridden murals at Denver International Airport

By Elle Naef, Alexis Kikoen, Peter Vo, Rocky Mountain PBS

The iconic murals displayed at DIA created by Leo Tanguma have drawn attention from people around the world since the 1990s. Unfortunately, much of the focus has been on the imagery of destruction rather than the storyline that ends with a vision of world peace.

Along with other elements of DIA, conspiracy theories about the murals have gone viral — rumors of Nazi or Illuminati ties, and warnings of the “new world order.” While these claims are unfounded, they have made a significant impact on the lives of the artists.

“I need to see what’s wrong in society, and then reflect it in my murals. At the same time, I wanted to reflect what’s beautiful in society and in my community,” Tanguma said.

Twenty-eight years after unveiling the murals, Tanguma spoke to Rocky Mountain PBS at his granddaughter’s home surrounded by family photos and artwork. His daughter and collaborator Leticia Darlina Tanguma was nearby offering emotional support, welling with pride as her father reflected on his artistic legacy.

“It was a spiritual awakening for me,” he added. “I’ve always been spiritual, I think. But those experiences moved me more to consider that what I had in my abilities was a God-given talent. And I think that was made important in those murals.”

DIA conspiracies

The murals at the airport, now temporarily in storage, depict the terrors of war and pollution. Among the chaos is a group of sleeping children. From their minds extends a grey mist that turns into a rainbow, leading to a portrayal of an ideal world, entitled “In Harmony with Peace and Nature.”

Despite the effort Tanguma, Darlina, and their supporters poured into the murals, the type of fame and recognition they received wasn’t what many artists pine for. Since their unveiling, conspiracy theories about the murals have run rampant.

Darlina learned about some of the rumors in the early 2000’s. She recalls hearing, “‘People hate that mural. They say, you wanted 9/11 because of that figure of war. They say that in the Bible, all these dirty animals are unclean. They say, ‘Why are you painting people in coffins?’ And, you know, just on and on where it became a terrible conspiracy.”

The delayed construction of the airport continued to feed rumors of secret underground networks, and with each new idea came a web of uncredible theories attempting to tie other works of art at the airport, like the mustang sculpture nicknamed “Blucifer,” to rumors of plotted terror.

People have profited from books and documentaries about the theories, but Tanguma and Darlina say they have rarely been asked about the actual meaning behind the murals.

And while many people find the conspiracies laughable (DIA has even turned some into a marketing opportunity), the consequences of these rumors are far from funny for the Tanguma family.

Leo Tanguma proudly displays a snow leopard his daughter Leticia (right) had painted from memory. (Elle Naef, Rocky Mountain PBS)

The Impact of the conspiracy theories

According to Darlina, the conspiracy theories started before the murals were even complete.

“We did have a few people come in at the time that were painting it. They said, ‘don’t paint this. There’s a new world order.’ We had no idea what they were talking about back then,” Darlina shared.

As soon as the conspiracy theories began, Tanguma lost two valuable commissions, and according to Darlina, both of them were harassed. Some people even resorted to death threats.

“People have said things like, ‘You need to destroy the art. You need to destroy the artist who did this,’” she recalled.

“I thought and I still think that these people are deranged,” said Tanguma. “For example, one religious minister called the mural satanic. Others said that they saw demons.”

Despite the airport allowing Darlina to have plaques installed explaining the murals, the conspiracies continued.

Darlina said that while people have the right to interpret art as they would like, it’s important to acknowledge the cruelty behind how these theories unfolded. She said that to overlook the important messages of peace, justice and hope the murals were meant to portray causes harm to entire communities.

“They’re [the conspiracies] destroying the artwork, too,” explained Darlina. “I’ve met other people that have been so depressed,” she continued, referring to people who feared the conspiracy theories were true.

Faces of our community

Family friend of the Tagumas, Cheryl Detwiler Mihaka, also helped create the murals. Taguma said that her talent combined with Darlina’s helped them portay a deep sense of compassion in their art.

“Both my daughter and Cheryl had experienced physical violence in relationships, so that also humanized them more,” he shared. “So, I had not only fantastically talented young women working with me, but also they brought me back to the spirituality of what we were trying to do.”

Tanguma also explained why he wanted the mural to come from the perspective of a child. “I think that there is a certain innocence among the oppressed, among the people that are uneducated, that don’t have access, practically, to life.”

Tanguma was also influenced by his work with youth who had been imprisoned, and others who were high schoolers that he painted alongside.

“I think that my connection with painting with young people, there’s been that that I’ve seen the possibilities and I’ve seen the destruction,” he summarized.

The focus of youth seemed to add to the draw of passersby, who also impacted the direction of the murals. Between 1992 and 1995, Tanguma painted murals in a room in the Lakeside Mall. The combination of large panels and Mexican music drew in curious patrons.

A traveller passes by the “Children of the World Dream of Peace” mural in the main terminal of Denver International Airport in April 2016. (David Zalubowski, AP file)

Word spread of the work in progress, and parents asked for their children to be depicted in “Children of the World Dream of Peace.” Among the parents were some who had lost their children and asked Tanguma to memorialize them in the mural.

One mother asked for a depiction of her son who had recently passed from suicide, another whose daughter was killed while helping her friend escape an abusive situation. Some had lost their children to gang violence.

Also featured in the mural was Tanguma’s young granddaughter, her cousins and classmates, and well-known children from around the world such as young activist Samantha Smith, (who passed in a plane crash), or brothers who marched for peace in Afghanistan. And while originally, he hadn’t planned to include political elements, Tanguma said the need to depict the injustices of war became apparent — an issue he was all too familiar with after having served in the military.

Connecting Colorado to the rest of the world

While painting the children, Tanguma asked for the families’ countries of origin, and depicted the children in the traditional clothing from each area. Over time, as many as 70 countries were portrayed.

“These are fantastic experiences that have to mold you, because you see the beauty of humanity daily, from many, many countries of the world,” he reminisced.

Tanguma hoped that by including each of these countries, the artists could spread a message of peace to places beyond Colorado.

“I saw that as an opportunity to take the ideas that I have learned in my own community, a community where they are aspiring for greater civil rights and cultural identity, that permitted me to share those ideas with the passersby from almost any country in the world,” he said.

Artist Leo Tanguma sits for a portrait recently at his granddaughter’s home in Denver. (Elle Naef, Rocky Mountain PBS)

A resilient legacy

Attempts to destroy the artwork of the Tanguma family are not new to them. Leo Tanguma has faced critiques of his work since he was a child in Texas.

“When I was in the fifth grade in elementary school, I did some drawings on the blackboard about my classmates killing our town sheriff,” he recalled. “So, I got severely punished for that. But the reason I did that is because the sheriff in our hometown was the killer. He had killed, up to that point, seven Mexican-Americans — including two of my mom’s cousins.”

Tanguma continued to do artwork portraying both injustice and visions for resolution. He was commissioned for a mural while stationed in Germany, and once again in the 1960s when he was transferred to California. There, he did a mural honoring the Mexican American movement for civil rights.

Eventually, his artist studio in his hometown of Houston was destroyed in a case of suspected arson. Around this time, his wife, Darlina’s mother, passed away from cancer. The family decided to try to start anew in Denver, where Darlina began her career as an artist while Tanguma continued creating well-known murals in places like the Denver Art Museum.

“Imagine a person that’s blacklisted in Houston. When I got to Denver, the Denver Art Museum asked me to do a mural inside the museum. What beautiful feelings that I had,” he shared. “But I still kept painting issues. I thought that besides the beautiful city and surroundings that I see, still there remained police brutality, education, women’s liberation, war.”

Through it all, Tanguma and his daughter have remained strong in their messages of hope, connected to art, and perhaps most importantly, connected to each other.

“My daughter has been the most important figure that I’ve ever painted with,” Tanguma shared. “Because not only is she talented, but she’s aware, aware of conditions, aware of our culture and our history.”

And as far as the conspiracies go, they haven’t stopped the Tangumas either. “It made me more dedicated, I think, because after that I did a number of other murals with social and cultural meaning,” he said.

Darlina continues to collaborate with community in her artwork both independently and through the Redline Contemporary Art Center’s Reach program, and Tanguma is planning a mural with students from East High School.

“I think rumors like the airport conspiracies and the mural conspiracies, they really seek to destroy the human connection, the human spirit.” Darlina said. “But I want to create artwork that will bring us together.”

Oaxaca Week photography exhibit to open in Poughkeepsie

Oaxaca Week photography exhibit to open in Poughkeepsie

/*! elementor – v3.14.0 – 26-06-2023 */
.elementor-heading-title{padding:0;margin:0;line-height:1}.elementor-widget-heading .elementor-heading-title[class*=elementor-size-]>a{color:inherit;font-size:inherit;line-height:inherit}.elementor-widget-heading .elementor-heading-title.elementor-size-small{font-size:15px}.elementor-widget-heading .elementor-heading-title.elementor-size-medium{font-size:19px}.elementor-widget-heading .elementor-heading-title.elementor-size-large{font-size:29px}.elementor-widget-heading .elementor-heading-title.elementor-size-xl{font-size:39px}.elementor-widget-heading .elementor-heading-title.elementor-size-xxl{font-size:59px}

NOMA faces outcry for hiring White curator of African art, in echo of 2020 protest

NOMA faces outcry for hiring White curator of African art, in echo of 2020 protest

Last week, the New Orleans Museum of Art trumpeted the hiring of a new curator to oversee the 112-year-old institution’s trove of traditional art from various African cultures.

North Carolina native Amanda Maples’ credentials are impressive. She earned a doctorate in visual studies from the University of California after studying visual anthropology at the University of Kent in Canterbury, England, and anthropology at the University of North Carolina.

Before accepting the job at NOMA, Maples was the curator of global African arts at the North Carolina Museum of Art. Her highest-profile curatorial accomplishment so far is an exhibit she composed titled “Good as Gold: Fashioning Senegalese Women,” which appeared at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art in 2018.







OdysseyBall2021-07.jpg

The Odyssey Bal was held at the New Orleans Museum of Art, November 12, 2021.




On paper, Maples seemed suited for the job. But criticism quickly arose, because NOMA had selected a White person to manage the collection of art and artifacts that is a touchstone of African culture. At this writing, more than 4,500 comments have accumulated beneath the announcement of Maples’ hiring on NOMA’s Facebook page, most questioning the NOMA administration’s judgment.

As one commenter put it: “With all due respect to her qualifications, isn’t it also incredibly important to empower someone to curate their own history? Isn’t it incredibly important to increase diversity in your staff, and isn’t this an obvious position for that?”

In response, NOMA quickly released a statement to the press, promising to “listen closely” to the concerns of New Orleans residents, but also acknowledging “that listening is only a small part of honoring our commitment to being an inclusive and anti-racist institution.”

The process

In a telephone conversation Thursday, NOMA’s director of marketing and communications, Charlie Tatum, explained that the museum relied on an outside consultant to reach candidates. In the end, he said, Maples was selected based on a set of criteria that was applied to all applicants.

The museum, he said, sought someone with expertise in African art history and experience with the repatriation and restitution of artifacts that may have been illegitimately collected in the past.

Tatum said the museum expected the new curator to increase the museum’s collection to include contemporary examples of African arts and crafts, to expand the geography of NOMA’s collection to all areas of the continent, and to have connections with colleagues and institutions in Africa.

“People of African descent were definitely considered,” Tatum said, but in the end, Maples won out.







NO.noma.adv

Jacob Lawrence’s 1964 painting ‘Four Sheep,’ is a lush impression of marketplace ritual.




Calls for greater representation

Tatum wouldn’t say if the museum anticipated the public criticism of the decision to hire a White curator for the role of African art authority. But he noted that there had been precedent for the situation. In 2018, the Brooklyn Museum experienced a similar public outcry when it appointed a White woman as a consulting curator of African art.

At the time, he said, “important voices in the field of African Art did stand up for her.”

Tatum said the Brooklyn Museum controversy was “indicative of larger issues in the field,” and resulted in “calls for greater representation, more African-American voices in academia and the museum world.”

A recent post on The Art Newspaper website concerning the NOMA controversy cites a 2018 episode of NPR’s “Code Switch” podcast, in which Steven Nelson, then director of the UCLA African Studies Center, said that “the field of African art history in the U.S. is largely white and female.”

Advancements compromised?

Contacted by phone, Professor Haitham Eid, director of the Master of Arts in Museum Studies Program at Southern University at New Orleans, said he doesn’t doubt that NOMA’s new curator is qualified. But not choosing someone of African descent was a profound misjudgment, he said.

In his view, NOMA has made strides in recent years toward racial inclusiveness, but this incident, he said, is “a huge mistake that compromised all the advancements the museum has made.”

According to Eid, Black curators are available. For example, he said that between nine and 11 students graduate from SUNO’s Museum Studies program each year. Most are African-American.

“Appointing a white curator for NOMA’s African art collection raises questions about the authenticity and lived experiences that should inform the interpretation and curation of these artworks,” Eid wrote in a passionate social media post. “African art is deeply rooted in cultural practices, traditions, and histories that can only be fully understood by those who have a personal connection to these communities.”







NO.nefertari.031822.0008.JPG

Curator Lisa Rotondo-McCord, left, gives a preview tour of the New Orleans Museum of Art’s exhibit “Queen Nefertari’s Egypt” that opens on Friday, March 18 and features this limestone statue of the goddess Mut in New Orleans, La. Thursday, March 17, 2022. 




Past controversy

In recent years, NOMA has staged several exhibits that honor Black culture, including “Black Orpheus: Jacob Lawrence and the Mbari Club,” “Picture Man: Portraits by Polo Silk,” “Called to the Camera: Black American Studio Photographers” and “The Quilts of Gee’s Bend.”

But in 2020, five former Black employees accused the museum of racial insensitivity and slighting Black people in employment opportunities.

In a public letter, NOMA’s former public programs manager, Jennifer Williams, said Black employees felt underrepresented and isolated in the museum workplace.

“You walk into a board room full of 20 to 30 people, the management staff and decision makers,” she said, “and there’s one Black man and one Black woman present.”

In the aftermath, the museum, a public institution that serves a majority Black population, promised to be more conscious of its future policies and procedures.

“We pledge that the power of our actions will define what we aspire to as a community,” NOMA director Susan Taylor said after the 2020 incident.

Tatum said that since 2022, 43 percent of NOMA’s new hires have been non-White.







NOMA_façade.jpg

The New Orleans Museum of Art 




Immersing in New Orleans

Maples replaces Ndubuisi Ezeluomba as African art curator. Ezeluomba, who was raised in Benin City, Nigeria, left NOMA in 2022 to take a position at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. William Fagaly, who joined the museum’s staff in 1966, is credited with establishing NOMA’s extensive African art collection. Fagaly retired in 2016 and died in 2021.

Reached by phone, Maples said she had no comment on the situation.

In a prepared statement, Maples said: “As I continue to immerse myself in New Orleans, I am considering how to fill historical gaps in the museum’s extensive collection to tell the fullest story of African art possible and how NOMA can highlight the work of contemporary artists in Africa.”

She is currently curating a future exhibit titled “New Masks Now: Artists Innovating Masquerade in Contemporary West Africa,” which may be especially interesting to New Orleans audiences, since masking is such an important feature of our contemporary culture. The show is scheduled to open at NOMA in 2025. 

Tatum said that in view of the negative public reaction, the museum plans to conduct a town hall-style meeting to discuss the issue of race and equity within museums. No date for the event has been set.

Man finds a closed case filled with unused photography equipment for just $17: ‘That’s quite a haul’

Man finds a closed case filled with unused photography equipment for just $17: ‘That’s quite a haul’

The phrase “Do not open” on a closed case often ignites a sense of curiosity within us, compelling us to defy the warning. Typically, such warnings are intended to deter us from accessing something potentially dangerous. However, there are rare instances when we are grateful that a daring thrift shopper took the leap and opened the forbidden case. Reddit user u/michael1265 shared a unique find that garnered over two thousand upvotes. The post included a picture of the exclusive find, which seems to be unused photography equipment.

Image Source: Pexels | Photo by Alexander Dummer
Representative Image Source: Pexels | Alexander Dummer

The caption explained the lucky thrift as, “I found a closed case, at a local thrift shop. It was taped shut and marked ‘Do not open.’ Because of that, it had sat unsold and had been marked down from $100 to $17 over time. I am not a rule follower. Monolight, slave light, two light stands, two umbrellas, synch cords, never used.” The user who was in and out of the hobby for 40 years can now practice photography well.

Representative Image Source: Pexels | u/michael1265
Representative Image Source: Pexels | u/michael1265

ADVERTISEMENT

Thrift stores not only offer a wide array of secondhand clothing but also boast an extensive selection of other items, including homewares and miscellaneous goods. Exploring these sections can lead to significant savings on various household essentials such as dishes, cookware, glassware, small appliances, lamps and more. For aspiring photographers, in particular, stumbling upon a fortunate discovery at a thrift store can provide a valuable opportunity to enhance their craft while enjoying substantial cost savings.

Image Source: Reddit
Image Source: Reddit

One Reddit user, u/Adorable_Disaster424, wondered, “What would all that roughly retail for if bought new?” To which u/AG24KT replied, “I’ve never heard of jtl systems before, but they seem like competent makers of lighting kits. You’d probably have to spend around 150$ for something of comparable quality at retail. You could spend around 100$ for a two-light setup like this, but you wouldn’t get the same quality nowadays.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Image Source: Reddit
Image Source: Reddit

Much like the buyer, the comment section was stunned because one can’t help but wonder, ‘What are the odds?’ “It’s hilarious that the thrift store sold it without opening it up. Could have been full of gold bullion,” joked u/DenaBee3333. “Well, bois, you know it’s a sign to get back into photography,” commented u/mattiscool3. “Wow, what an incredible oversight on the part of the thrift store! I would have thought in order to sell it that it would have been the first thing they did. Nice find! And for someone in and out of the hobby for so long, based on your other comment, I would take it as a pretty strong sign, lol,” added u/Argo_York.

Image Source: Pexels | Photo by Terje Sollie
Representative Image Source: Pexels | Photo by Terje Sollie

ADVERTISEMENT

In another odd chance, one Reddit user, u/Erinzzz, found a great deal in a thrift store. On the same subreddit, they displayed their new 11-inch salad bowl from The Great Alaskan Bowl Company. This one was originally priced at $119. “Wow! I scored a $119.11 wooden bowl from The Great American Bowl Co. (AK) for one dollar at a garage sale! Just in time for Big Salad Season,” they explained.

Image Source: Reddit | u/Erinzzz
Image Source: Reddit | u/Erinzzz

The bowl purchased by the Reddit user from The Great Alaskan Bowl Company is biodegradable. The company also claims to have a low to zero waste manufacturing facility, which means that nearly all of the wood and sawdust generated during manufacturing is used up or donated. Because making wooden bowls may result in deforestation, this Reddit user has maximized their low-impact lifestyle by purchasing this wooden bowl secondhand from a company that already attempts to cultivate wood sustainably.