Looking To The Future

It’s at the end of the day at the Green River Rendezvous. The night fires have been started, meals are being prepared, it’s a quiet time where folks wander out onto the green and talk a little. In a little while the kids will be sent to bed and the grownups will gather to sing and tell stories and laugh and talk about the good old days. But right now it’s time for a little introspection. A time to hold a loved one.  To think about what the future might bring and to wonder if all will be well. It will be of course, but still when you hold that small bundle of love and feel that tiny beating heart next to yours you wonder. What does the future hold. Goodness, we hope, love, maybe even happiness.

Time Travel

The photo above was taken at the North American Indian Days or NAID held every year by the Blackfeet tribe at Browning, Montana. There, members of the tribe gather and celebrate their heritage by dancing, singing, displaying their treasured regalia and horses, and their culture in all of its splendor.

Sometime during the celebration they hold a parade and it’s a grand parade. Everyone shows up as the participants walk, ride or are carried in decorated vehicles through the streets of Browning. Many with their own interpretation of how things were before modern civilization entered the picture.

This woman riding her prized horse with its foal walking along side in the parade is an example of how the culture and traditions of the tribe are upheld. As an observer you can choose to view this scene as it actually occurred, where the parade passed in front of a large store with crowds of people standing in front, cars parked along the roadway, the street itself in stark relief with its blacktop reality as an element in the image, a strict documentation of the event as it actually was, or you can choose to see it another way. As an artist first and photographer second and a hopeless romantic thrown in to boot, I chose to see her as a member of the tribe on a journey to the summer camping grounds, where there was plenty of new grass for the horses, the game was plentiful in the mountains, and space in the lush valley to set up their lodges while they lived their lives as they always had in the past.

A generous use of photo editing software allowed me to time travel and remove the modern day distractions, the cars, the buildings, the crowds, hopefully recreating that feeling of a bygone era. Romanticized, of course, but that’s how I see a lot of the world. Whether it actually existed like this doesn’t matter, Art is what you see in your minds eye whether it’s a gritty fact-filled stark reality with all its warts and blemishes, or  an idyllic imagined peaceful scene. There’s no political agenda here, just an attempt to show the beauty and history and yes the nostalgia of an incredible people as it may have been in a long ago time. Time travel and an emotional escape to a place that may never have existed as portrayed but certainly should have.

If you get an opportunity go and see the powwow of the Blackfeet tribe at Browning, Montana. You might just see your own vision, all you have to do is look and imagine.

Happy 4th of July !

Happy 4th of July everybody.

Despite Buffoons, Crooks, Liars, Sociopaths, Narcissists, Fools, Embarrassments, and every other title you can add, notwithstanding this is still the greatest country in the world. So enjoy your freedoms and keep a close watch so we don’t lose them. Many of our best and brightest died to preserve the rights that are under siege at this moment in time and it’s up to us to keep those rights safe. Let us choose wisely the next opportunity we get to pick those that lead us. That’s still one of the greatest rights we have, to choose our leaders by the will of the people and to be able to correct our mistakes through peaceful means. Let’s exercise those rights the next time we have the chance.

Happy 4th of July.