Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 09 20

Nathan Pearce’s show with Clint Woodside of Deadbeat Club starts in a few hours at my See You Soon studio space! He took the train up yesterday from his home in southern Illinois and we spent some time talking while he hung his work, which is beautiful and looks great printed large. His visit motivated me to get back into my own work, of which I had a big folder full of images from my work-in-progress Illinois series which I hadn’t yet touched. I’ve just been too busy this year to keep up on everything I’ve started or want to start doing. While this in itself is stressful, it made me excited for the winter months ahead as I will have no shortage of things to keep me busy.

Hope you can make it to the show today!

-Clayton

Stop sign, reflection. Chicago, Illinos. May, 2024. © Clayton Hauck

Nathan Pearce’s show with Clint Woodside of Deadbeat Club starts in a few hours at my See You Soon studio space! He took the train up yesterday from his home in southern Illinois and we spent some time talking while he hung his work, which is beautiful and looks great printed large. His visit motivated me to get back into my own work, of which I had a big folder full of images from my work-in-progress Illinois series which I hadn’t yet touched. I’ve just been too busy this year to keep up on everything I’ve started or want to start doing. While this in itself is stressful, it made me excited for the winter months ahead as I will have no shortage of things to keep me busy.

Hope you can make it to the show today!

-Clayton

Read More
Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 08 15

Hello. I’ve been quite busy lately and it’s largely due to my studio and photography projects taking up all of my time. Can’t complain, just a little note to myself to make me feel less bad about neglecting my side projects, like this here blog. Anyway, here’s a dinosaur I spotted recently while working in my studio. Sometimes I don’t even need to leave the room and I can still make beautiful award-winning images (joke).

-Clayton

PS - I’ve got some really fun events coming up at the studio… the place that is taking all of my time from me. Come out and hang, why don’t you?!

Dinosaurs walk amongst us, on The 606 Trail. Chicago, Illinois. July, 2024. © Clayton Hauck

Hello. I’ve been quite busy lately and it’s largely due to my studio and photography projects taking up all of my time. Can’t complain, just a little note to myself to make me feel less bad about neglecting my side projects, like this here blog. Anyway, here’s a dinosaur I spotted recently while working in my studio. Sometimes I don’t even need to leave the room and I can still make beautiful award-winning images (joke).

-Clayton

PS - I’ve got some really fun events coming up at the studio… the place that is taking all of my time from me. Come out and hang, why don’t you?!

Read More
Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 08 13

A day (today) in the life of a working photographer:

7am wake up and get ready to tackle the day!

8:30am breakfast sandwich to go

9:30am arrive at location for editorial portrait shoot, unload, set up

10am photograph subject for editorial portrait shoot

11am break down, load car, drive to grocery store to edit photos and grab lunch

12pm check emails and make phone calls

2pm arrive at second location for second editorial portrait shoot, unload, set up

2:30pm photograph subject for editorial portrait shoot

3:30pm jump into rush-hour traffic and drive home to grab studio key

4:30pm arrive at studio to open up for a wardrobe fitting

5pm download and back-up photos, help production load in, etc

5:30pm warm up slice of leftover pizza to eat

6pm post to self-imposed daily blog before the day ends (late again!)

6:30pm write my morning pages which I neglected to do in the morning

7pm work on treatment which is due the following day

9pm help production load out and lock up studio

9:30pm stop into bar for a cold one and maybe another bite

10:30pm get back home, remove pants, clean up mess, discuss wedding stuff with partner

11:30pm more work on treatment

12am set alarm for 7am and repeat

-Clayton

A photo of pretty flowers to provide me a moment of calm. Chicago, Illinois. May, 2024. © Clayton Hauck

A day (today) in the life of a working photographer:

7am wake up and get ready to tackle the day!
8am arrive at studio to load up the car with equipment
8:30am breakfast sandwich to go
9:30am arrive at location for editorial portrait shoot, unload, set up
10am photograph subject for editorial portrait shoot
11am break down, load car, drive to grocery store to edit photos and grab lunch
12pm check emails and make phone calls
2pm arrive at second location for second editorial portrait shoot, unload, set up
2:30pm photograph subject for editorial portrait shoot
3:30pm jump into rush-hour traffic and drive home to grab studio key
4:30pm arrive back at studio to open up for a wardrobe fitting, unload car
5pm download and back-up photos, help production load in, etc
5:30pm warm up slice of leftover pizza to eat
6pm post to self-imposed daily blog before the day ends (late again!)
6:30pm write my morning pages which I neglected to do in the morning
7pm emails, dms, work on confirming details of an event happening in a few weeks
7:30pm work on treatment which is due the following day
9pm help production load out and lock up studio
9:30pm stop into bar for a cold one and maybe another bite
10:30pm get back home, remove pants, clean up mess, discuss wedding stuff with partner
11:30pm more work on treatment
12am set alarm for 7am and repeat

-Clayton

Read More
Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 03 22

Having spent a good deal of time in small rural Illinois towns recently, in towns that feel largely forgotten to time, hollowed out and missing a majority of their people, towns with cemetery populations larger than that of their living, it was quite eye opening when I stumbled across a statistic recently. Of America’s wealthiest large cities by median household income, in the year 1949, you would never guess which names topped the list when driving their streets today. Sure, if you’re a student of US history, you can probably guess some of the names, but even still they were quite shocking to me. Before the Rust Belt was a place, the Steel Belt was a place and it was home to prosperous and growing cities which built much of the world’s most valuable products. Before these factories were outsourced and moved overseas, Detroit was the wealthiest city in America, in the top spot on this list. Subsequently, Detroit’s population (once 1.8 million) declined by well more than half (to a just over 600,000 today) leaving much of the city empty and abandoned. My parents both grew up in Milwaukee, which was at the time the third wealthiest city in the country by these metrics, and out of ten combined siblings only one remains there today.

Everything dies, even cities. But unexpected upsides occur as a result of hard times. There’s such a large supply of cheap houses in many of these towns, it’s not hard to imagine an influx of young people from across the country desperate to get a taste of the Remains of the American Dream. We’ve already seen Detroit rebound rather remarkably from its recent rock bottom. Last weekend I had fancy cocktails in both Ottawa and Rochelle, Illinois, both in beautifully-restored buildings on their charming old Main Streets.

These trends played out over decades and were caused by a wide range of reasons, however, when viewed in such stark contrast of then vs. now, it seems hard to believe Cleveland was once the second wealthiest city in America in my dad’s lifetime! While this is super fascinating in it’s own right and a subject that can be examined with endless depth, what gets me even more interested is exploring how these trends might play out in the future. Demography is destiny, they say, and a large number of developed countries around the world are now losing population. If we correlate what happened to America’s Midwest to the rest of the world, will Japan become the next Ohio? Will Seoul soon look Pittsburgh-esque? Or will the Rust Belt rise again and overtake China as the next global mega power?

I’m off to buy some property in Peoria…

-Clayton

The 606 Trail during sunset. It was formerly an industrial freight line and today largely serves a purpose of leisure. Chicago, Illinois. February, 2024. © Clayton Hauck

Having spent a good deal of time in small rural Illinois towns recently, in towns that feel largely forgotten to time, hollowed out and missing a majority of their people, towns with cemetery populations larger than that of their living, it was quite eye opening when I stumbled across a statistic recently. Of America’s wealthiest large cities by median household income, in the year 1949, you would never guess which names topped the list when driving their streets today. Sure, if you’re a student of US history, you can probably guess some of the names, but even still they were quite shocking to me. Before the Rust Belt was a place, the Steel Belt was a place and it was home to prosperous and growing cities which built much of the world’s most valuable products. Before these factories were outsourced and moved overseas, Detroit was the wealthiest city in America, in the top spot on this list. Subsequently, Detroit’s population (once 1.8 million) declined by about two-thirds (to a just over 600,000 today) leaving much of the city empty and abandoned. My parents both grew up in Milwaukee, which was at the time they kids the third wealthiest city in the country by these metrics, but out of ten combined siblings only one remains there today.

Everything dies, even cities. But unexpected upsides occur as a result of hard times and cities are capable of surviving far longer than individual humans. There’s such a large supply of cheap houses in many of these towns, it’s not hard to imagine an influx of young people from across the country desperate to get a taste of the Remains of the American Dream. We’ve already seen Detroit rebound rather remarkably from its recent rock bottom. Last weekend I had fancy cocktails in both Ottawa and Rochelle, Illinois, both in beautifully-restored buildings on their charming old Main Streets.

These trends played out over decades and were caused by a wide variety of reasons, however, when viewed in such stark contrast of then vs. now, it seems hard to believe Cleveland was once the second wealthiest city in America in my parents’ lifetime! While this is super fascinating in it’s own right and a subject that can be examined with endless depth, what gets me even more interested is exploring how these trends might play out in the future. Demography is destiny, they say, and a large number of developed countries around the world are now losing population, just as America’s Rust Belt has in recent history. If we correlate what happened to the Rust Belt to the rest of the world, will Japan become the next Ohio? Will Seoul soon look Pittsburgh-esque? Or will the Rust Belt rise again and overtake China as the next global mega power?

I’m off to buy some property in Peoria…

-Clayton

Read More