Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 11 12

Self-promotional post today, because itā€™s going to be a fun one and you should totally be there! Iā€™m hosting an event in my studio space next Thursday for the release of Crust Fund Pizzaā€™s new pizza cookbook, Super Pizza World! Tickets are $75 but that also gets you a copy of the book (which is awesome and I have some writing in there myself!), along with a bunch of food and drinks. Plus, all the money collected is going to benefit a nonprofit organization in the building, Chicago Mobile Makers. As of writing this, there are about ten tickets remaining, so if this sounds fun, click this link asap for more info and to snag a spot!

-Clayton

Sipping a tasty Wisconsin Old Fashioned in summer. St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

Self-promotional post today, because itā€™s going to be a fun one and you should totally be there! Iā€™m hosting an event in my studio space next Thursday for the release of Crust Fund Pizzaā€™s new pizza cookbook, Super Pizza World! Tickets are $75 but that also gets you a copy of the book (which is awesome and I have some writing in there myself!), along with a bunch of food and drinks. Plus, all the money collected is going to benefit a nonprofit organization in the building, Chicago Mobile Makers. As of writing this, there are about ten tickets remaining, so if this sounds fun, click this link asap for more info and to snag a spot!

-Clayton

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Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 11 02

The other day, I asked a friend if she wanted to get involved in one of my endless list of side projects. She politely declined by saying she was ā€œunderwaterā€. This caused me to realize Iā€™ve been fully submerged myself for three years now, like a fish swimming around towards whatever task it deems most important or most interesting any given day or moment. Iā€™m starting to wonder how sustainable this approach to life is!

That said, the last three years of my life have been perhaps the best (recency bias may play a factor, sure, but this is an honest assessment!) as Iā€™ve gotten married, explored a ton of new things, built out my studio which Iā€™m incredible proud of, made endless new contacts, focused more on my creative outlets (was just out working on a personal project yesterday), ditched a bunch of less-healthy distractions (stock market, politics and geopolitics, largely), and a bunch more Iā€™m probably not thinking of. On top of all this, however, the last few years have also easily been the most stressful of my adult life from a financial perspective. I often wonder if these two divergent trends are related (I think they are, to an extent) and how my happiness might be affected if I was rolling in cash (happiness is over-rated but money is even more so, imo!).

Anyway.

These are some thoughts I should further explore in writing in the months ahead. Today, I attempt to swim to the surface to catch a view of things.

-Clayton

Staying aflot to catch some lunch. St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

The other day, I asked a friend if she wanted to get involved in one of my endless list of side projects. She politely declined by saying she was ā€œunderwaterā€. This caused me to realize Iā€™ve been fully submerged myself for three years now, like a fish swimming around towards whatever task it deems most important or most interesting any given day or moment. Iā€™m starting to wonder how sustainable this approach to life is!

That said, the last three years of my life have been perhaps the best (recency bias may play a factor, sure, but this is an honest assessment!) as Iā€™ve gotten married, explored a ton of new things, built out my studio which Iā€™m incredible proud of, made endless new contacts, focused more on my creative outlets (was just out working on a personal project yesterday), ditched a bunch of less-healthy distractions (stock market, politics and geopolitics, largely), and a bunch more Iā€™m probably not thinking of. On top of all this, however, the last few years have also easily been the most stressful of my adult life from a financial perspective. I often wonder if these two divergent trends are related (I think they are, to an extent) and how my happiness might be affected if I was rolling in cash (happiness is over-rated but money is even more so, imo!).

Anyway.

These are some thoughts I should further explore in writing in the months ahead. Today, I attempt to swim to the surface to catch a view of things.

-Clayton

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Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 10 25

Todayā€™s picture comes from the future! This is because I posted it the day after I was supposed to. Donā€™t tell anyone.

Depending on how you look at it, though, it was actually early. People seeing this post from a far-away galaxy wonā€™t have access for it for perhaps millions of years.

My audience is huge on Planet Clayborg in the Zxx3 system.

-Clayton

Star-filled night sky over St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

Todayā€™s picture comes from the future! This is because I posted it the day after I was supposed to. Donā€™t tell anyone.

Depending on how you look at it, though, it was actually early. People seeing this post from a far-away galaxy wonā€™t have access for it for perhaps millions of years.

My audience is huge on Planet Clayborg in the Zxx3 system.

-Clayton

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Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 10 13

Off day today. That said, I woke up early and watched the worldā€™s largest rocket launch and then immediately land back on the tower it launched from. Space X is truly game-changing technology and, I think, far less appreciated (for better or for worse) than it should be. The things they are now making routine will change the world in ways we canā€™t yet imagine, far beyond simply putting things into space or going to Mars.

-Clayton

Chilling on the lake. St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

Off day today. That said, I woke up early and watched the worldā€™s largest rocket launch and then immediately land back on the tower it launched from. Space X is truly game-changing technology and, I think, far less appreciated (for better or for worse) than it should be. The things they are now making routine will change the world in ways we canā€™t yet imagine, far beyond simply putting things into space or going to Mars.

-Clayton

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Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 10 06

The recent flooding caused from Hurricane Helene was obviously disastrous. One depressing observation Iā€™ve had since then is the discourse on social media. A large number of people (and/or bots, influencer accounts, foreign hostile disinformation campaigns, conspiracy theorists, etc, etc) have been commenting about how the government has been either actively involved in ā€œcontrollingā€ the weather or delaying the response, for any number of reasons.

My current thinking is that I need to finally rid myself of the twitter app, as it seems to be actively working to increase tensions ahead of the election. The videos being fed to me are wild, terrifying, grim, and hard to turn away from. All this to say, the video below popped into my youtube feed while editing images tonight and, while also intense, was a rather authentic representation of what it was like to live through the current disaster from a first person perspective. It was definitely eye opening in a number of ways.

If you are curious about what went down but want to avoid the extreme social media spin takes, the video below is worth your time.

-Clayton

Water. It is you, yet it will kill you every chance it gets. St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

The recent flooding caused from Hurricane Helene was obviously disastrous. One depressing observation Iā€™ve had since then is the discourse on social media. A large number of people (and/or bots, influencer accounts, foreign hostile disinformation campaigns, conspiracy theorists, etc, etc) have been commenting about how the government has been either actively involved in ā€œcontrollingā€ the weather or delaying the response, for any number of reasons.

My current thinking is that I need to finally rid myself of the twitter app, as it seems to be actively working to increase tensions ahead of the election. The videos being fed to me are wild, terrifying, grim, and hard to turn away from. All this to say, the video below popped into my youtube feed while editing images tonight and, while also intense, was a rather authentic representation of what it was like to live through the current disaster from a first person perspective. It was definitely eye opening in a number of ways.

If you are curious about what went down but want to avoid the extreme social media spin takes, the video below is worth your time.

-Clayton

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Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 10 05

I started writing this after hearing Jon Stewartā€™s interview with Ta-Nehisi Coates and continued writing it this morning while listening to a This American Lifeā€™s episode from firsthand accounts of the kidnappings in Israel/Gaza, along with seeing this tweet about a possible impending strike or invasion of Iran happening right now.

I wonā€™t claim to have any answers or point any fingers. I am merely trying to better understand, which, if I did have any ideas on what to do, it would be this (while acknowledging that mass-understanding is a remarkably hard, if not impossible, task).

Ta-Nehisi Coates said something on Jon Stewart that really stuck with me. On his recent trip to Lebanon, he was struck by the simple act of hearing, from Palestinians, what their issues are. Itā€™s a common-sense idea that usually goes ignored. Hearing, and understanding, the perspective of the other side. Once you realize they are also humans with similar thoughts and concerns as yourself, it becomes quite hard to justify the endless bombing campaign being made against them.

Tit for tat forever.

The conflicts in the Middle East are vastly complicated to the point they have become a cliche. Personally, Iā€™ve been critical of Israelā€™s handling of their response to the brutal invasion of their territory, in large part because I have been to Lebanon and talked with Palestinians myself. They were sane, and logical, and passionate. One guy, roughly my age, told me he would never in his lifetime be okay with Israelā€¦ existing. Then we went and casually grabbed beers at a bar (where he also described horrific events that happened during the previous war). These extreme thoughts and ideas are commonplace on both sides because of the decades of back-and-forth violence and escalation.

Once you see this perspective firsthand, you realize the price that will need to be paid in order for one side to get their way, and it quickly becomes untenable. Surely, diplomacy is the only possible solution, and for that you need give, not just take.

This is all to say, I also think Israel has been right and justified to an extent. Both sides are guilty of horrible behavior and both sides have been victims of it as well. When you are the clearly dominant force, as is Israel and the United States in most conflicts to have taken place in our lifetime, if you act as the bully you should expect the bruise to your reputation. What worries me most about this conflict, which gets largely ignored, is that itā€™s not as one-sided as most people realize. Iran is an active participant. That is where things can snowball, quickly. That is where I now fear Israel sees an ā€œopportunityā€ to act, now, swiftly and dramatically, in order to cease the moment, regardless the consequences. 

Weā€™ll eventually reach a tipping point and opinions will change. Possibly after millions of people are dead ā€” but letā€™s pray it doesnā€™t come to that. Itā€™s ironic that religion is so much at the core of these issues because praying is really the only option for most of us looking on in horror at what is now playing out. Praying, and hopefully, despite the darkness, a bit of understanding. 

-Clayton

Money: the cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems! St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

I started writing this after hearing Jon Stewartā€™s interview with Ta-Nehisi Coates and continued writing it this morning while listening to a This American Lifeā€™s episode from firsthand accounts of the kidnappings in Israel/Gaza, along with seeing this tweet about a possible impending strike or invasion of Iran happening right now.

I wonā€™t claim to have any answers or point any fingers. I am merely trying to better understand, which, if I did have any ideas on what to do, it would be this (while acknowledging that mass-understanding is a remarkably hard, if not impossible, task).


Ta-Nehisi Coates said something on Jon Stewart that really stuck with me. On his recent trip to Lebanon, he was struck by the simple act of hearing, from Palestinians, what their issues are. Itā€™s a common-sense idea that usually goes ignored. Hearing, and understanding, the perspective of the other side. Once you realize they are also humans with similar thoughts and concerns as yourself, it becomes quite hard to justify the endless bombing campaign being made against them.

Tit for tat forever.

The conflicts in the Middle East are vastly complicated to the point they have become a cliche. Personally, Iā€™ve been critical of Israelā€™s handling of their response to the brutal invasion of their territory, in large part because I have been to Lebanon and talked with Palestinians myself. They were sane, and logical, and passionate. One guy, roughly my age, told me he would never in his lifetime be okay with Israelā€¦ existing. Then we went and casually grabbed beers at a bar (where he also described horrific events that happened during the previous war). These extreme thoughts and ideas are commonplace on both sides because of the decades of back-and-forth violence and escalation.

Once you see this perspective firsthand, you realize the price that will need to be paid in order for one side to get their way, and it quickly becomes untenable. Surely, diplomacy is the only possible solution, and for that you need give, not just take.

This is all to say, I also think Israel has been right and justified to an extent. Both sides are guilty of horrible behavior and both sides have been victims of it as well. When you are the clearly dominant force, as is Israel and the United States in most conflicts to have taken place in our lifetime, if you act as the bully you should expect the bruise to your reputation. What worries me most about this conflict, which gets largely ignored, is that itā€™s not as one-sided as most people realize. Iran is an active participant. That is where things can snowball, quickly. That is where I now fear Israel sees an ā€œopportunityā€ to act, now, swiftly and dramatically, in order to cease the moment, regardless the consequences. 

Weā€™ll eventually reach a tipping point and opinions will change. Possibly after millions of people are dead ā€” but letā€™s pray it doesnā€™t come to that. Itā€™s ironic that religion is so much at the core of these issues because praying is really the only option for most of us looking on in horror at what is now playing out. Praying, and hopefully, despite the darkness, a bit of understanding. 

-Clayton

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Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 10 04

95 50 (random) Opinions:

  1. roller coasters are fun

  2. pizza is delicious

  3. tacos are delicious and equally as good as pizza

  4. trains are severely underrated in the US

  5. Europe, while great, is an overrated American tourist travel destination

  6. Rome is much better than Florence

  7. cats are better than dogs, but the best dogs are better than average cats

  8. photography is amazing, however, steadily losing its edge

  9. if I dedicated my entire life to being a musician, I could probably make it work

  10. being very poor and being very rich can give people similar carefree mindsets, while being middle class can be a constant hassle

My half-drank Wisconsin Old Fashioned at Blink Bonnie, the best supper club in all the land. St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

95 50 (random) Opinions:

  1. roller coasters are fun

  2. pizza is delicious

  3. tacos are delicious and equally as good as pizza

  4. trains are severely underrated in the US

  5. Europe, while great, is an overrated American tourist travel destination

  6. Rome is much better than Florence

  7. cats are better than dogs, but the best dogs are better than average cats

  8. photography is amazing, however, steadily losing its edge

  9. if I dedicated my entire life to being a musician, I could probably make it work

  10. being very poor and being very rich can give people similar carefree mindsets, while being middle class can be a constant hassle

  11. my opinions are getting longer as I go

  12. simple is usually better

  13. Mexico is a massively underrated country

  14. Japan is easily one of the best countries

  15. Pittsburgh is one of the best cities in America

  16. bitcoin is fascinating, while polarizing, no matter what the origin actually is

  17. Ai will change the world, but more so in the less obvious ways that currently worry us

  18. nuclear power should be far more utilized by modern society

  19. nuclear fusion power generation will eventually be figured out and either solve all worldā€™s big problems or create a human-induced hellscape

  20. the sun is amazing. like, how does that even happen?!

  21. the fact that the sun is one of trillions of other suns doesnā€™t make any sense

  22. this very well could be some kind of simulation

  23. god, which ever one you believe in, likely isnā€™t a thing, but surely something god-like exists, beyond our comprehension

  24. the best US state is probably California

  25. Texas is good, but Iā€™d never want to live there

  26. the best city in Texas is Houston, actually maybe itā€™s Austin?

  27. Chicago is leagues better than Houston

  28. San Antonio is an underrated city

  29. Austin is an overrated city

  30. professional sports leagues have lost some of their charms as theyā€™ve become such big business

  31. baseball is the best sport, but far from the most entertaining one

  32. books are better than movies but movies are far more accessible

  33. shows are really just long ass movies

  34. one fun thing to do in a city you are visiting is take the train to the last stop and get off

  35. opinions are like, your opinion, man

  36. The Big Lebowski is not the Coen Brothersā€™ best film, but it is great

  37. Barton Fink is the Coen Brothersā€™ best film

  38. There Will Be Blood is probably my favorite film

  39. acting, as a job, is a crazy job

  40. rivers are neat

  41. massive solar flare is a natural disaster that worries me, probably because I live in Chicago and donā€™t have to worry about the obvious ones

  42. Chicago is an underrated city

  43. rivers are better than lakes

  44. the US relies far too heavily on cars and trucks and should better utilize our waterways

  45. China is a fascinating place

  46. Russia is a fascinating place

  47. both China and Russia will look far different than they do now in a few decades in ways we probably canā€™t predict

  48. history is written by the winners

  49. school is overrated but also very important for a functioning society

  50. Jet Lag the game on youtube is one of my favorite shows and I wish I came up with the idea and did it myself

-Clayton

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2024 10 03

One weird abstract thought I often revisit is the sheer amount of events happening all over our solar system at any given moment. Like a tree falling in the woods with nobody around to see it, there are so many epic and amazing things happening right now, as you read this, that nobody will ever know about. Massive storms on Jupiter bigger than our entire planet; rocks colliding into other rocks at speeds we can only imagine; long-scrapped human-made exploration devices so remote and lonely, existing in a void without any planet nearby to give them a sense of belonging. And all of this just within our own home system, which, while relatively close, still remains largely a mystery to us due to the remarkable size and distance.

Once you start to view the Milky Way in the sky and get a better sense of the scale we exist in, things quickly get impossible to comprehend. Then, when you consider our galaxy system is one of billions of other galaxy systems, each comprised of billions of stars and likely trillions of planets, itā€™s no wonder we mere humans have a countless number of Gods we call on to meekely attempt to make some sense of the whole thing.

-Clayton

Brian setting up his telescope. St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

One weird abstract thought I often revisit is the sheer amount of events happening all over our solar system at any given moment. Like a tree falling in the woods with nobody around to see it, there are so many epic and amazing things happening right now, as you read this, that nobody will ever know about. Massive storms on Jupiter bigger than our entire planet; rocks colliding into other rocks at speeds we can only imagine; long-scrapped human-made exploration devices so remote and lonely, existing in a void without any planet nearby to give them a sense of belonging. And all of this just within our own home system, which, while relatively close, still remains largely a mystery to us due to the remarkable size and distance.

Once you start to view the Milky Way in the sky and get a better sense of the scale we exist in, things quickly get impossible to comprehend. Then, when you consider our galaxy system is one of billions of other galaxy systems, each comprised of billions of stars and likely trillions of planets, itā€™s no wonder we mere humans have a countless number of Gods we call on to meekely attempt to make some sense of the whole thing.

-Clayton

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2024 10 01

Notes From a Podcast (a semi-regular ongoing series??)
PhotoWork with Sasha Wolf episode 82 - Matthew Genitempo

While editing an endless pool of images, I often listen to Sashaā€™s great podcast full of interviews with fine art photographers (is there a better label than fine art photographer? photographer, I guess?). I feel the need to specify: not commercial photography, which is what Iā€™m personally more familiar with. This was a standout episode and very much worth a listen, however the following things stood out prominently.

One: Matthew said he gives himself a geographical boundary and then goes out to make work and see what comes back; see what the pictures are telling him, instead of going out and trying to illustrate a picture he has in his head. His recent book project (Dogbreath) was made in Tuscon, Arizona because he was drawn to the distinct sunlight quality and unique urban setting (you see things that are new to you and it sparks your imagination). He visited a school and found the local photo students were not as excited about their own familiar city as he was. Each morning, heā€™d begin his day with a jog and use it to scout the territory and even meet people that became subjects in the book.

I love all of this and strongly agree with the sentiments. My own personal project began this year with ā€œIllinois outside of Cook Countyā€ as my boundaries. Quickly, Iā€™ve learned these boundaries are likely too large, however, Iā€™ve also been listening to what the images are telling me, and themes and ideas are slowly emerging and my approach is adapting. Hopefully next year I will have more time to dedicate to this project, but I loved hearing and learning from Matthewā€™s experiences in his existing book projects.

Two: Sasha made an amazing baseball player slump analogy. When a player isnā€™t performing, usually either their mechanics are off or they are pressing. They are trying to hard and overthinking it, instead of going on instinct. An artist works best under the same circumstances. Let the ball come to you and make contact. Donā€™t force it.

This analogy is amazing and I strongly agree with it. The other day, I was discussing my approach with a friend and explaining to him how, on my smaller shoots, I operate mostly on feel, while doing everything myself. Lights go up, find an angle, find a power setting to match some settings on the camera, ambient lights are considered, emotions of the subject are considered, etc, etc, all mostly on auto-pilot. Comparing this to approach to my commercial jobs, where the final direction and style are usually pre-determined and there is a crew constantly awaiting your direction isnā€™t always an easy task for me, because my intuition is to feel it out first, then act.

Three: Thereā€™s a quote from Judith Joy Ross that Matthew loves and thinks of as one of the formative ways he looks at photography and helped open him up: ā€œI have a large beautiful wooden camera. Iā€™m a quick talker and I can convince people in a few seconds because Iā€™m sincerely interested in them, but I am more interested in capturing what I see in them. Itā€™s not that I want to be their friend, itā€™s that I see their life and itā€™s amazing and I want to put it in an image. Itā€™s a short but deep connection. Then I go back to being alone, but have one more lighting bug in a bottle. One more piece of evidence as to who we are.

This is beautiful and I aim to internalize this sentiment and allow it to help me in my process. Often, my instinct is to make photographs of people without them being aware of it. This is an approach which is increasingly frowned upon my a society sensitive to a constant and over-bearing surveillance. I love the idea of better connecting with my subjects and then lowering the barriers to allow them to be themselves. This is my approach on every commercial project I undertake and thereā€™s no reason I canā€™t also bring it into my personal work. Even if it takes more effort and wonā€™t always work, I think itā€™s worth the effort.

Two final details that I jotted down and enjoyed:

Robert Adams talks about ā€œthe gift pictureā€ ā€¦ one image that sort of ties a project together and you can work off of.

Sasha: ā€œThereā€™s drudgery in every dream jobā€ ā€¦ on packing books into boxes all, day, long. Or, in my case, committing to write daily about it all.

-Clayton

Moonlight over the horizon. St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

Notes From a Podcast (a semi-regular ongoing series??)
PhotoWork with Sasha Wolf episode 82 - Matthew Genitempo

While editing an endless pool of images, I often listen to Sashaā€™s great podcast full of interviews with fine art photographers (is there a better label than fine art photographer? photographer, I guess?). I feel the need to specify: not commercial photography, which is what Iā€™m personally more familiar with. This was a standout episode and very much worth a listen, however the following things stood out prominently.

One: Matthew said he gives himself a geographical boundary and then goes out to make work and see what comes back; see what the pictures are telling him, instead of going out and trying to illustrate a picture he has in his head. His recent book project (Dogbreath) was made in Tucson, Arizona because he was drawn to the distinct sunlight quality and unique urban setting (you see things that are new to you and it sparks your imagination). He visited a school and found the local photo students were not as excited about their own familiar city as he was. Each morning, heā€™d begin his day with a jog and use it to scout the territory and even meet people that became subjects in the book.

I love all of this and strongly agree with the sentiments. My own personal project began this year with ā€œIllinois outside of Cook Countyā€ as my boundaries. Quickly, Iā€™ve learned these boundaries are likely too large, however, Iā€™ve also been listening to what the images are telling me, and themes and ideas are slowly emerging and my approach is adapting. Hopefully next year I will have more time to dedicate to this project, but I loved hearing and learning from Matthewā€™s experiences in his existing book projects.

Two: Sasha made an amazing baseball player slump analogy. When a player isnā€™t performing, usually either their mechanics are off or they are pressing. They are trying to hard and overthinking it, instead of going on instinct. An artist works best under the same circumstances. Let the ball come to you and make contact. Donā€™t force it.

This analogy is amazing and I strongly agree with it. The other day, I was discussing my approach with a friend and explaining to him how, on my smaller shoots, I operate mostly on feel, while doing everything myself. Lights go up, find an angle, find a power setting to match some settings on the camera, ambient lights are considered, emotions of the subject are considered, etc, etc, all mostly on auto-pilot. Comparing this to approach to my commercial jobs, where the final direction and style are usually pre-determined and there is a crew constantly awaiting your direction isnā€™t always an easy task for me, because my intuition is to feel it out first, then act.

Three: Thereā€™s a quote from Judith Joy Ross that Matthew loves and thinks of as one of the formative ways he looks at photography and helped open him up: ā€œI have a large beautiful wooden camera. Iā€™m a quick talker and I can convince people in a few seconds because Iā€™m sincerely interested in them, but I am more interested in capturing what I see in them. Itā€™s not that I want to be their friend, itā€™s that I see their life and itā€™s amazing and I want to put it in an image. Itā€™s a short but deep connection. Then I go back to being alone, but have one more lighting bug in a bottle. One more piece of evidence as to who we are.

This is beautiful and I aim to internalize this sentiment and allow it to help me in my process. Often, my instinct is to make photographs of people without them being aware of it. This is an approach which is increasingly frowned upon by a society sensitive to a constant and over-bearing surveillance. I love the idea of first better connecting with my subjects and then lowering the barriers to allow them to be themselves. This is my approach on every commercial project I undertake and thereā€™s no reason I canā€™t also bring it into my personal work. Even if it takes more effort and wonā€™t always work, I think itā€™s worth the effort.

Two final details that I jotted down and enjoyed:

Robert Adams talks about ā€œthe gift pictureā€ ā€¦ one image that sort of ties a project together and you can work off of.

Sasha: ā€œThereā€™s drudgery in every dream jobā€ ā€¦ on packing books into boxes all, day, long. Or, in my case, committing to write daily about it all.

-Clayton

EPISODE LINKS:

podcast link: https://open.spotify.com/episode/3jMjkuu3kPl0N8GxX3tEZZ

photographerā€™s website: https://www.matthewgenitempo.com/dogbreath-1

to read: Core Curriculum https://books.apple.com/us/book/core-curriculum/id949942181

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Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 09 26

You miss posting one day, and that turns into two days, which then turns into a week. I missed posting yesterday, as I was busy working and then immediately connected with friends for dinner, which turned into an all-night celebration. Iā€™m allowing myself grace by posting this image, today, under yesterdayā€™s date. Letā€™s see if I can get around to making a post happen today, now.

-Clayton, a busy boy.

Night in the Northwoods. St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

You miss posting one day, and that turns into two days, which then turns into a week. I missed posting yesterday, as I was busy working and then immediately connected with friends for dinner, which turned into an all-night celebration. Iā€™m allowing myself grace by posting this image, today, under yesterdayā€™s date. Letā€™s see if I can get around to making a post happen today, now.

-Clayton, a busy boy.

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2024 09 23

Last night, we watched Ren Faire, the three-part mini series on HBO, and I was kind of blown away by the project. Going in, Iā€™d assumed it was a documentary and my brain was primed for a good doc-viewing experience. Without spoiling anything, Iā€™ll just say that I categorize it in a new still-developing genre of filmmaking that blurs reality with narrative forms of storytelling, and Iā€™m not yet fully sure what to think of it. Much like news has largely become a facts-optional landscape of entertainment-minded-viewer-pleasing content, the genre of documentary filmmaking is going through a similar transformation, with modern tools of moviemaking allowing for some clever new approaches. Stylistically speaking, Ren Faire was one of the best films Iā€™ve seen in recent memory (also, Iā€™m such a sucker for the anamorphic lens work they used).

Today, I came across this quote from Stanley Kubrick:

ā€œA film is - or should be - more like music than like fiction. It should be a progression of moods and feelings. The theme, what's behind the emotion, the meaning, all that comes later.ā€

While Iā€™m not sure the quote ties in with my thoughts on Ren Faire, I will add that oftentimes I find movies pay too much attention to style and not enough attention to story. While they did some amazing work on the project, especially with editing, audio, and cinematography, you started to get the sense that this crew could make damn near any group of people interesting, so whatā€™s the point of spending so much time learning about this specific group?

All that said, if you are into film at all, give Ren Faire a watch. And now Iā€™m off to try and find a reasonably-priced anamorphic lens.

-Clayton

Preparing for dinner at the Northwoods lake cabin. St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

Last night, we watched Ren Faire, the three-part mini series on HBO, and I was kind of blown away by the project. Going in, Iā€™d assumed it was a documentary and my brain was primed for a good doc-viewing experience. Without spoiling anything, Iā€™ll just say that I categorize it in a new still-developing genre of filmmaking that blurs reality with narrative forms of storytelling, and Iā€™m not yet fully sure what to think of it. Much like news has largely become a facts-optional landscape of entertainment-minded-viewer-pleasing content, the genre of documentary filmmaking is going through a similar transformation, with modern tools of moviemaking allowing for some clever new approaches. Stylistically speaking, Ren Faire was one of the best films Iā€™ve seen in recent memory (also, Iā€™m such a sucker for the anamorphic lens work they used).

Today, I came across this quote from Stanley Kubrick:

ā€œA film is - or should be - more like music than like fiction. It should be a progression of moods and feelings. The theme, what's behind the emotion, the meaning, all that comes later.ā€

While Iā€™m not sure the quote ties in with my thoughts on Ren Faire, I will add that oftentimes I find movies pay too much attention to style and not enough attention to story. While they did some amazing work on the project, especially with editing, audio, and cinematography, you started to get the sense that this crew could make damn near any group of people interesting, so whatā€™s the point of spending so much time learning about this specific group? It started skewing into style over substance territory.

All that said, if you are into film at all, give Ren Faire a watch. And now Iā€™m off to try and find a reasonably-priced anamorphic lens.

-Clayton

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Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 09 22

Writing is hard. I woke up this morning with a great story playing out in my head. Often, Iā€™ll awake in the middle of the night, in the midst of a dream which seems like an amazing story, only to wake up hours later and reassess the dream in the light of day as not very interesting after all. That said, todayā€™s story was formed in my waking moments, while fully conscious of what I was crafting. Excitedly, I rushed downstairs to my laptop and began to jot down my thoughts on the screen before immediately hitting a wall and losing all momentum. The sentences sounded fantastic in my head but proved impossible to get onto paper. Likely, my conscious brain began to over-think and harshly judge the words once they existed in the actual world, where other people might end up reading them.

All that said, Iā€™m considering this a step in the right direction. Writing is not easy, art is not easy. I know this, but Iā€™m optimistic that continued effort to translate these thoughts into real-life words will eventual pay off, much as my decades-long efforts into photography have given me a more comfortable approach to turning my ideas into photos.

-Clayton

Allison at the cabin in the Northwoods. St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

Writing is hard. I woke up this morning with a great story playing out in my head. Often, Iā€™ll awake in the middle of the night, in the midst of a dream which seems like an amazing story, only to reassess the dream in the light of day as not very interesting after all. That said, todayā€™s story was formed in my waking moments, while fully conscious of what I was crafting. Excitedly, I then rushed downstairs to my laptop and began to jot down my thoughts on the screen before immediately hitting a wall and losing all momentum. The sentences sounded fantastic in my head but proved impossible to get onto paper. Likely, my conscious brain began to over-think and harshly judge the words once they existed in the actual world, where other people might end up reading them.

All that said, Iā€™m considering this a step in the right direction. Writing is not easy, art is not easy. I know this, but Iā€™m optimistic that continued effort to translate these thoughts into real-life words will eventual pay off, much as my decades-long efforts into photography have given me a more comfortable approach to turning my ideas into photos.

-Clayton

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Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 08 29

Ten minutes prior to deadline. Although, technically, Iā€™ve missed the deadline since itā€™s passed midnight in my current location on the shores of the Atlantic Ocean. Iā€™ll give myself a pass since itā€™s not quite tomorrow yet in Chicago. But Iā€™m walking on thin ice around here. This image, made in upstate Wisconsin, reminded me of my week here on the waters of coastal Maryland. I always love making images of water and waves, especially when beautiful lighting is involved. Itā€™s cheap, sure, but look how mesmerizing this is!

See you tomorrow (today).

-Clayton

Lake waves. St Germain, Wisconsin. July, 2024. Ā© Clayton Hauck

Ten minutes prior to deadline. Although, technically, Iā€™ve missed the deadline since itā€™s passed midnight in my current location on the shores of the Atlantic Ocean. Iā€™ll give myself a pass since itā€™s not quite tomorrow yet in Chicago. But Iā€™m walking on thin ice around here. This image, made in upstate Wisconsin, reminded me of my week here on the waters of coastal Maryland. I always love making images of water and waves, especially when beautiful lighting is involved. Itā€™s cheap, sure, but look how mesmerizing this is!

See you tomorrow (today).

-Clayton

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