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Britain has been broken, splintered from every corner and they can’t quite put all the pieces back together again.  This shot of a ‘gaffer tape union jack’  could not be a more appropriate visual metaphor, and all the other pictures this week symbolically represented the distorted,and subsequently divisive, perception of our national identity. Monday’s shot was an image that reflected the “great” days  of the British Empire. Tuesday was  a street art portrait of the Queen in her headscarf, looking like an ordinary elderly woman, the flag behind her, sprayed onto a shutter of a shop closed for business. Wednesday was a woman kneeling in front of the English flag, shadows closing in around her, seemingly defeated whilst a sign in the window states: ‘Take the risk, or lose the chance’.  And then yesterday, a shot of a newspaper (yesterday) which cruelly echoed the famous headline that appeared after the first massive wave of European immigrants into this country: “Will the last person in Poland please switch off the lights?”

A lot of people freaked out when so many Eastern Europeans came over here but there is only one statistic that was ever relevant in relation in immigration: they put more in than they take out. So what was the problem exactly? A threat to our sovereignty? What even is that? Why are we defined by the country we were born in? We could have been born anywhere. Why do we need to take up everything it stands for, lock, stock and barrel? Everyone’s been banging on about sovereignty but all I know is you can’t pay your rent with it and you can’t eat it.

The attempt to preserve our national identity in the face of a globalised existence has brought this country to its knees but it doesn’t really exist. It is a concept. It is not real. In the highly enlightening book ‘Sapiens’ by Yuval Noah he explains how societies are held together with ‘imagined belief systems’ which are ideas that everyone agrees to follow so that we can all get along and function. Religion, capitalism, national and cultural identity are all ‘imagined belief systems that people adhere to so that their society doesn’ fall apart at the seams. When people stop believing in the same thing, it all starts to fragment and divisions emerge and hostility between different belief systems takes hold. This is where we are at. In order for harmony to be reinstated we would need to create a new belief system. The question is, what could we all unite over? What do we now all believe? In a post-truth world of fake news where opinion carries more weight that fact, it will be hard to find anything we all agree on. Even the flat earth theory is back for fuck’s sake. Now that little nugget of truth arrived many moons ago so the fact it is now in question again shows how demented things have got. Devolution is officially in effect.

The only thing we could all agree on, if everyone was to accept the data and what they know deep down to be happening is that it is all a distraction from the climate emergency that is taking over this planet. This is thr common enemy that will affect everyone and could be the one thing that would finally unite us as a single tribe where we would see beyond identity, race, gender, religion, politics and just see a single species in desperate need of unification  to defeat this threat to our survival…if only people could agree it existed. Acceptance will lead to a solution. And we do need a solution. Nothing else matters…not even Brexshit.

I went to my first ever Extinction Rebellion this week. It was very encouraging to meet people who are not just going to sit back and wait for nothing to happen. They are galvanising into a global organisation that will do anything it can to raise the issue so that they declare it the level of emergency that it truly is. They are organising a massive demonstration/shut down of London on April 15th but are planning things all over the world. There are groups springing up everywhere. If there isn’t one local to you, start one. Time to get on board cos they’re ain’t no other train leaving the station. We have to fight. We cannot go from denial to defeat and skip the solution bit. We inherited a working planet and an environment contusive to our species. We must do everything we can to pass that on to future generations. Join the resistance: https://rebellion.earth

The time for ignoring this shit is over…

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A total mix bag this week, no connections other than glorious chaos. As I return my gaze to London I always find, that no matter where I look, there is always something to be discovered.

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And so ends my photographic journey through California. Hope you enjoyed. I was initially trepidatious about going to America on this trip as it was going to be the first time I had visited since Trump came to power and I expected it to be visibly different but it wasn’t. There was no way of knowing. You forget when you watch the news that it isn’t real life. It has nothing to do with the everyday and it does not relate to the folk you meet.

I actually found that everyone seemed even friendlier and more chilled since I was last in California and that possibly had something to do with it now being Legal Weed World ‘n’ all (see wednesday’s post). I actually think it just highlighted the disparity between the perceived notion of a country and its people as fed to you by the media and what it actually is. Not to say that the Trump isn’t totally fucking horrendous on so many levels, he is, but he is not necessarily a  reflection of what it is to live and be in America.

Just like Brexit and the shit show that is our Government is not a reflection of a giant chunk of us here in the U.K. Although, you would also presume so if you were watching it on the News from abroad. Not saying it isn’t having an effect, it is, but your day-to-day is the same…you get up, you work, you eat, you hang out with people, what actually makes up our life is not affected at all. I would also, go as far to say that the things that really depress me in the news do not impact me at all and yet it is still difficult to ignore. The disparity between what we see is happening in the world and what we actually experience makes for quite a paradoxical existence.

One of the reasons I am doing this series now is that I just can’t bear to be here at the moment, even mentally. Nothing good is going to come from me losing my shit watching people, who we entrusted to govern, scrabble around to save themselves, with not a single thought for the impact it is having  on us or the country. And there is cock all point discussing it because no-one is listening. And so I choose to spend this time ‘being elsewhere’, anywhere but here…

…so next week, Stockholm! A place that actually gives a shit about its residents and their wellbeing…now isn’t that something?

 

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This is a swarm of drones flying over Palm Springs. It was pretty freaky to see them hovering above us en masse, destination unknown. What was even more freaky was the eery buzzing sound they created as it really  just sounds like one thing: the end of the human race. And when I looked at this photo, what was even freakier still is the light trail (from the long exposure) made them all look like a battalion of ‘ds’ flying overhead. Were they in fact spelling both themselves and our demise? Have they already achieved consciousness? Is it already over for us? Am I looking into this way too much? Probably, definitely and highly likely to all of the above.

They say that as soon as we hit the ‘point of singularity’ when machines achieve genuine artificial intelligence it will instantly be too late (see Terminator films for ref) and we will all be doomed so it might be worth paying attention to any little stepping stones that get us nearer to that moment…just saying.

On the off chance that machines do take over I would just like to say I have always been a big fan, love your work and I hope I can be of assistance in the future…

Babycakes Romero,

(future computer collaborator)

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What is the link between the photographs this week? Answers on a postcard…or an email: bcr@babycakesromero.com

 

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They have a scooter scheme in Paris like the Santander bikes in London but people do not return them to a designated area, they just leave them all over the city. You see them everywhere. It would appear that the system is failing as no-one puts them back where they should so they appear in random places wherever you go. Poor things, left there, lost and lonely, abandoned. Life’s tough on the streets, at least sometimes they are together…

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This week’s photographs feature the current Portobello Wall Public Art project by Anastasia Russa. Over the summer I passed by most days and saw it come to life during an endless stream of sunshine. On most days you could see the artist, mostly hidden under her customary sun hat, working on the next portrait.  It was great to see this work of art build and grow as the project progressed. The mural which spans one entire block along Portobello Rd shows the changing eras and inhabitants of the area. The artist is not from the area but spent months talking to locals as to who should be included.

Among those featured are Piers Thompson who runs Portobello Radio, Khadija Saye, an artist who died in the Grenfell fire and Tim Burke, who was a lovely man and a neighbour of mine, who tragically took his own life at the end of last year. These are interspersed with other locals from both past and present.

I am interested in how art on the streets, whether commissioned or not, affects the inhabitants of the area it appears in. Whether we are consciously aware of it, there is an interaction, a connection, a moment of reflection. Even though art is not technically essential for survival, it is still integral and necessary to our lives. Its presence can uplift and create a fleeting instance of calm in the chaos whilst also providing little pockets of  visual pleasure from within the humdrum of the daily backdrop. A lot of art related projects were the first things to be axed by councils when austerity measures slashed their budgets in half as they felt extraneous to living but I think art, of any nature,  is vital and can make the difference between being happy and not.

Last week I showed a lot of local tagging and how little it contributed other than to serve as a force for defacement. Maybe I was a little hard on Boner (sorry ;) but signatures used to accompany a piece of work, not be the piece of work and so, when you see actual art in action, as in this mural, you see how it can light up a street and bring colour to the greyness.

To see the full gallery please click on this link: https://babycakesromero.com/photography/artwall/ 

for more info on this project: https://www.rbkc.gov.uk/leisure-and-culture/culture/current-portobello-wall-public-art-project

Have been doing a lot of doorstep documentation recently so going to venture a little further afield..next stop, Paris!