Jan 17 '12

30.

personal

May you build a ladder to the stars and climb on every rung. May you stay forever young.

Tuesday morning and the snow is falling, dusting all the cars I see out my window. This past Sunday I ushered in a new decade of life. I took it harder than I thought I would. I don’t think it’s the actual number, but rather life’s current circumstances and the fact that your birthday lends itself to thinking about yourself even more than normal. An entire day of people telling you how old you and where you’re at in life’s continuum.

Although most of my industry peers and friends are my age or older, I still focus on the handful who are younger than me. I don’t compare my work to their work, or anything like that. But I compare my age to their ages. How they are so young (my favorite photographer is 20!) and already on the paths of their dreams. How lucky they were to know that and follow it so early. I wonder what it would have been like if I’d done the same. I do realize that my own path … as non-linear as it was … brought the right people into my life at the right time. And having a professional position outside of the arts first, makes me never want to give up being my own boss now (my old boss was awesome, but just saying). I know I will never give up on photography because of what’s behind me. I know comparing your age to someone else’s age is really dumb. It really is a number and nothing more. Who knows how long any of us will be here anyways? I am grateful I didn’t sit around thinking I was too old to start my own business until one day I really was too old. It’s about what lies before us and not behind us, anyway, that matters. I’m just babbling … this is the way my thoughts are these days.

It’s a crazy thought to me … leaving behind my 20s. I loved them, insane as they sometimes/often were. Their first half was marked by college, lots of new relationships and loss and growth and community and discovery. And, sadly enough, they were marked by giving up on art and all my dreams in exchange for security and safety and the known. 23 was perhaps the most epic and rollercoastery. Lots of Choose Your Own Adventure choices and decisions made that year. The second half of my 20s was marked by grad school, my first truly professional position with the UW, marrying Troy, adapting to life in a city where everyone moves away after college, mourning a community scattered across the globe and embracing a new, different community of like-minded inspiring creatives and photographers. Rediscovering and unveiling all my dreams again … and this time, actually going for them and making them happen, starting my own business and quitting my fulltime UW job. Settling in some ways and resisting settling in many more ways.

And now, 30.

Like I said, it’s not about the number. I’ve been looking forward to my 30s actually. People say it’s like stepping into your own skin. But I feel far from my own skin these days. January in general has been rough on me. If I’m being honest, I’ve been derailed since November. Out of sorts and uninspired. You can probably tell from my lack of blogging. I know this is mainly because I take time off in the winter from shooting … I just need to get back into that. I took a month away from Facebook and that was amazing just because it was one less thing suffocating me … one less thing laying itself down on my chest to squeeze the breath out of my lungs. One less thing to keep up with, impress others with. This is the deepest rut I’ve been in since starting my business. Things on paper are great … I still turn away more work than I’m able to take. I have inspiring and awesome clients. I’m not unhappy and I absolutely love my job. I’m just, not myself. January is always a time I look forward to like I used to look forward to the first days of school. Renewal and resolutions. But every day since December I’ve been filling pages upon pages in my Moleskine … trying to write it out and work it out. My head is stuck in years ago and years to come. What I really want and how I need to struggle through some change to get there. The time it will take. I’ve always been a daydreamer, but lately it’s extra hard to be in the present.  Somebody give me a personal project to work on. Tell me this won’t last. I know it won’t.

As I was writing this, a friend sent me a message on Twitter saying he took his 30th birthday really hard too. But now, a couple years in, it’s the best decade yet. I know he’s right — that it will be. I just need to shake this present feeling. Entering my 30s, I see myself focusing on the now, what I have, and loving it harder and better. I see myself embracing what I wasn’t ready for in my 20s, and seeking the approval of others less. I see myself recognizing what I need for myself and not what I need others to see me doing or being.

I see moving forward with balance and stealth. But never with so much balance that I forget to live with abandon and spontaneity when a moment presents itself. Because what is a life of only balance? I need to keep some of my 20s-spirit, after all.

Everything passes. I know that one day I won’t even remember these days. These times of darkness make the other times so much better. Perhaps this blog post was a little too raw and honest for a public and business platform. But it’s where I’m at and I wish others would write more from the heart sometimes so we wouldn’t all carry the illusion that we are always all inspired and *on* all the time.

I’m looking forward to a lookbook-inspired shoot next week. To shooting consistently again. I’m clinging to that for now :)

xx,

AM

Dec 10 '11

O Tejas!

personal

Get excited! That was the theme of my trip to borderland Texas to visit one of my dearest friends of all time, Jenny. Tacos for every meal (minus one?), beer on patios, rollerskating, border patrol, flea market, Spanish! Spanish! everywhere!, high school basketball, high school cheerleading, high schoolers, The Great Gatsby, lonches, roadside citrus, 90 degree humidity, walking downtown, bedazzled jeans, cactus, SECEDE!, freakshow dog, the Scamp, boots, shave ice, fresh citrus juice, green smoothies, cupcakes & chai, Pac-Man on the Island, standing on the Gulf in silence as the waves crashed.

The best part was connecting with Jenny. One of my closest friends in Madison years ago and still today. Our talks are the best … never surface-level. We both get so busy and might not always connect a ton between visits, but when we see each other it’s always as if we haven’t skipped a single beat. Easy like that.

I got to hang out with Jenny for a day at the high school where she teaches and her students adore her. She is so inspiring; I love having so many friends who are living their passions/callings. I almost teared-up a few times seeing her students interact with her. It’s so obvious when people are doing what they’re meant to be doing.  xoxo, Jenny. Love you, AM.

First series taken on Fuji 400H film with a 1970s Pentax SLR I borrowed from my dad over 10 years ago. The shutter is broken so it only takes photos at 1/100th shutter speed no matter what. Makes for some interesting thinking on your feet.

The second series was taken on my iPhone. Only brought my oldest & newest cameras with me.

Dec 5 '11

The Art of Reading over a decade of life

personal

I’ll never forget the look on her face … beaming through her exhaustion. She told me she stayed up until 4am to finish The History of Love in one fell swoop. I had finished the same book a day before and insisted she read it. I’ll never forget that look on my good friend Kaleen’s face. The look of unearthing a new world — one that would forever stick with her — one she simply *had* to stay up until 4am to unravel completely.

In the same way this image is burned in my memory, I can remember the exact moment I finished each of my most favorite novels. I try to read a book each week and I’ve been doing this for about a decade now. That’s 500+ books and five of them stand above the rest. Five of them that I will reread every single year again and again. The first best novel I read was in 2001 — Pilgrim at Tinker Creek by Annie Dillard. I finished it while hanging out at my regular coffee shop, The Blue Moon. At my table was a stack of letters I had just finished responding to and a worn journal full of quotes and articles. I had dial-up internet and a juno.com email address. No cell phone and I didn’t even know what digital cameras were. Life was more simple … I owned 5 shirts and 2 pants. I was simpler too.

In 2003 I finished One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. His magical realism shook my world and I’ve never stopped thinking about parallel realities or his haunting characters since. Appropriately, I finished this book on a Friday night around 3am in my host family’s house in Quito, Ecuador. I was living there while studying Latin American history and the Spanish language. There I met and became close with the members of a hugely popular band. We toured around the country and long before my professional photography days I was granted backstage access to shoot their shows. I was treated like a rockstar any place we went … art openings, private clubs, everywhere … I led a surreal and unforgettable life while there. A life I cannot imagine in the States. I’m still in touch with my host sisters … Ecuadorian versions of myself. South America is a place that makes my heart ache to think about. I miss it all the time.

In 2005 I finished The History of Love by Nicole Krauss and passed it right to my roommate Kaleen. We lived in an old and awesome house on the near east side of Madison while volunteering at a coffeehouse/music venue/restaurant. We were young, a little crazy, and driven … the people of our community talented and beautiful. We went out every night and threw the best parties (that was all Kaleen — I was never a good entertainer). I was transitioning from college to working life and totally undecided about my next step — Peace Corps, grad school, move away from Madison? Art and Photography were never on the agenda at this point — I was too scared. Those were dark days for me, actually. I’m really fortunate I had the roommates and friends I did at that point. Some of them stuck by me in ways I didn’t deserve. They will always be the closest to me, no matter the 936 or 2,091 or 1,533 or 840 miles between us.

It took four more years to discover another true favorite. In 2009 I finished East of Eden by John Steinbeck while on a roadtrip through the Southwest with Troy. I picked it up at a used bookstore in Sierra Vista, AZ and finished it while staying in Bisbee, near the border. I had short blonde pixie cut hair and a Canon Rebel (just for fun). I loved the desert and every minute in it … for its way of life and beauty, I fell in love with the American Southwest once again. The mountains and long dusty expanses have always felt like home to me.

On December 4, 2011 I finished The Art of Fielding by Chad Harbach. I’ll be rereading this along with the previously mentioned four novels the rest of my life. Ostensibly it’s about baseball. But really it’s about community,  failure, calling, and connection. It’s teeming with the subleties and the layers of the Human Condition. Philosophical without being annoying or trying too hard. It’s magic. In the same way I passed The History of Love to Kaleen back in 2005, I want to pass The Art of Fielding on to you all right now. I’m thrilled to see so many of my friends and followers already ordering and reading it. I don’t think you’ll regret it.

Left: me rereading Pilgrim at Tinker Creek (circa 2003) & Right: me reading The Art of Fielding last weekend (on my iPhone!).

“There were no whys in a person’s life, and very few hows. In the end, in search of useful wisdom, you could only come back to the most hackneyed concepts, like kindness, forbearance, infinite patience. Soloman and Lincoln: This too shall pass. Damn right it will. Or Chekov: Nothing passes. Equally true.” — The Art of Fielding

 

Nov 30 '11

Time & Recent Features & a New Song

personal photography weddings

So today is the final November morning and I can’t wrap my mind around time and timing. I’m always thinking about it too … how it moves, how its speed is amplified in proportion to the number of days we are alive, how it places us in certain places and next to certain people, and how it’s not really linear at all. Maybe I’ve just been reading too much Haruki Murakami lately … but parallel realities and timing/time have always engaged my mind.

I’m done shooting for a month; I always take December off from weddings and engagement sessions. Working on my accounting/taxes/insurance/other exciting paperwork items until the New Year. Also planning to hibernate the last week or so of December … spend time with family and friends and nothing else. Recharge for 2012 and my first wedding of the year in San Francisco mid-January.

I’m all booked up for 2012 weddings now so I’ve been reflecting on how the 2011 wedding season was wonderful and surreal as always. I was able to travel all over the country once again to shoot engagements and weddings and portraits. The people I’ve met have proved to be one-in-a-million yet again. It’s A LOT of hard work (believe me, none of this just *happened* to me) and ups and downs (read THIS ARTICLE for an idea), but mostly I still can’t believe this is my life and I’m doing what I love every day … for a living. I hope I never lose that feeling of awe.

I was so honored to be featured on some of my favorite wedding blogs in 2011. Below are a few select features from the past few months. Thanks to all my clients (and now friends) for having beautiful and inspiring events and letting me into their lives to document them.

Holly & Kohler’s Wedding on Style Me Pretty

Katie & Ben’s Wedding on Green Wedding Shoes

Jody’s Bridal Session on Perfect Bound

Victoria’s Bridal Session on Perfect Bound

Megan & Brent’s Wedding on Style Me Pretty

Megan & Brent’s Engagement Session on The Loveliest Day

Holly & Kohler’s Engagement Session on Perfect Bound

Several more of my awesome clients’ weddings and engagements will be featured in the coming months in both print and online. If time doesn’t escape me again, I’ll be better about updating the blog with those new features :)

I’ll leave you with a beautiful song I discovered late last night and cannot stop listening to this morning. xo, AM

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Nov 22 '11

Nikki & Le Car

personal portraits

Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday. For the most part it’s chill and not about buying stuff or running all over to parties and whatnot. This week I’m racing to get all my print orders, album designs, and DVDs done so I can sit and enjoy a day with family and football and food. I have a lot to be thankful for and I’m definitely thankful for the amazing and talented friends I’ve made since beginning this photography journey.  Nikki N is one of my favorites.

She has a new website launching in the coming weeks so we spent 30 minutes hanging out with her awesome car, house, and boyfriend … just capturing some relaxed images for the new site. Nikki said she wanted photos that felt like we were just hanging out and I love to shoot that way (I hate posing and don’t even really know how to do it) … so it was perfect.

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