documentation

[ED: Documentation, yes. That’s all I do with the photography, all I ever did. Documenting immediate life scrolling by. And let that accumulate into a modest mass of imagery. Extracted from the mass, they appear fragmentary, and not so replete with ‘meaning.’ Here’s a handful from a warm 1988 summer’s end.]

Upon my re-patriation after three months in Iceland, Germany, Italy, France, Luxembourg, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, following is a sample of what happened hanging with Willy & Andy in Hoboken:

concert in Central Park, Manhattan, New York, August ©1988 hopkins/neoscenes.
concert in Central Park, Manhattan, New York, August ©1988 hopkins/neoscenes.
at Willy & Andy's, Hoboken, New Jersey, August ©1988, hopkins/neoscenes.
at Willy & Andy’s, Hoboken, New Jersey, August ©1988, hopkins/neoscenes.
Willy & Andy, Hoboken, New Jersey, August ©1988, hopkins/neoscenes.
Willy & Andy, Hoboken, New Jersey, August ©1988, hopkins/neoscenes.
Andy, Hoboken, New Jersey, August ©1988, hopkins/neoscenes.
Andy, Hoboken, New Jersey, August ©1988, hopkins/neoscenes.
Lower Manhattan from Hoboken, New Jersey, August ©1988, hopkins/neoscenes.
Lower Manhattan from Hoboken, New Jersey, August ©1988, hopkins/neoscenes.

group portrait, the Sonya Walker Sextet

group portrait, the Sonya Walker Sextet: Nate, Sonya, Gabe R., John*, Leo, Gabe M., at Muse, Lafayette, Colorado, October ©2024 hopkins/neoscenes. (*John standing in for Adam G.)
group portrait, the Sonya Walker Sextet: Nate, Sonya, Gabe R., John*, Leo, Gabe M., at Muse, Lafayette, Colorado, October ©2024 hopkins/neoscenes. (*John G. standing in for Adam G.)
The Playlist:

— one rhapsodizes
— firmament
— troika
— the mice are men
— wail
— dear keith
— i swear that I care a lot, it’s just that i’m scared a lot
— howl
— pomade it
— spirit, be free

portrait, Helga Clara, Jón Teitur, and Glóey Bibi

portrait, Helga Clara, Jón Teitur, and Glóey Bibi, Seltjarnarnes, Iceland, May ©2024 hopkins/neoscenes.
portrait, Helga Clara, Jón Teitur, and Glóey Bibi, Seltjarnarnes, Iceland, May ©2024 hopkins/neoscenes.
portrait, Helga Clara, Jón Teitur, and Glóey Bibi, Seltjarnarnes, Iceland, May ©2024 hopkins/neoscenes.
portrait, Helga Clara, Jón Teitur, and Glóey Bibi, Seltjarnarnes, Iceland, May ©2024 hopkins/neoscenes.
portrait, Helga Clara, Jón Teitur, and Glóey Bibi, Seltjarnarnes, Iceland, May ©2024 hopkins/neoscenes.
portrait, Helga Clara, Jón Teitur, and Glóey Bibi, Seltjarnarnes, Iceland, May ©2024 hopkins/neoscenes.
portrait, Helga Clara, Jón Teitur, and Glóey Bibi, Seltjarnarnes, Iceland, May ©2024 hopkins/neoscenes.
portrait, Helga Clara, Jón Teitur, and Glóey Bibi, Seltjarnarnes, Iceland, May ©2024 hopkins/neoscenes.

Rick Albertson 1957 – 2022

death

We—Rick Albertson’s colleagues, fellow artists, activists, and friends—are deeply moved by his recent passing. Over many decades, Rick touched each of us in ways as diverse as his many interests, affections, and talents. At one time or another, we all will have been moved by his wit, candor, loyalty, and elan vital. He has indeed been a significant vector for us, nudging the course of our lives about in important ways. Many will have known greater joy, hope, and success on a given day because of Rick. Our debts to him are incalculable…but no matter, as Rick in his usual generous style would have forgiven those anyway!

Rick was an alumnus of the Penn State theater department where he obtained a degree in set design, a passion he had already cultivated by his mid-teens when working for the Erie Civic Theater Association. At that time, Rick was a lighting technician and also performed in the theater’s pit orchestra. Upon graduation, Rick was employed by various staging companies as well as operating one himself. His professional exploits carried him all over the US where he was responsible for staging countless conferences and media events. His colleagues will have known him for his boundless energy, creativity, and hands-on troubleshooting skills. There was no technical competency that Rick didn’t seem to possess. He had a way of bringing a sense of festivity into even the most stressful of working environments.

While based for many years in Atlanta, Rick played electric bass in many well-known jazz, rock, and blues bands, laying down a crucial bottom line at all sorts of performances and events. Forever in search of adrenaline, he was a crew member on the emergency rescue team at Road Atlanta Raceway, and he also managed to infect some of us with his love of whitewater rafting and scuba diving.

A voracious reader of…well…anything he could get his hands on, Rick was also an accomplished writer. He moved to California during the dot-com bubble where he worked for Talk City as an editor and administrator. Following that, Rick went to Boston as Contributing Editor for Senator John Kerry’s web site. Rick was also an active contributor to other sites like Democratic Underground and The Daily KOS. He eventually returned to Pennsylvania where he continued to be active in liberal politics, a lifelong passion of Rick’s where he worked as an activist on many fronts. Rick cherished democracy and seized every opportunity to promote and preserve it.

Rick’s capacity for listening and empathizing was unparalleled. Lastly, he went on to work with the Mental Health Association of Northwestern PA as a Certified Peer Specialist, interacting directly with a diversity of mental health clients…a perfect fit for this energized and energizing, compassionate man. It’s somehow appropriate that he will have touched their lives as he has ours…with affection, humor, love…and an inimitable way of assuring that all can and shall be well!

Andee Baker, Santa Fe, NM, USA; Ann Hyland, Wexford, IRELAND; Anneke Toomey, Loveland, CO, USA; Ari Davidow, Boston, MA, USA; Camille Vahey, Erie, PA, USA; Emily Zielinski, Canandaigua, NY, USA; Howard Rheingold, Mill Valley, CA, USA; Janna Nelson, Albuquerque, NM, USA; Janice MacDonald, Edmonton, AB, CANADA; John Hopkins, Cedaredge, CO, USA; John Mulligan, Silver Spring, MD, USA; John W. Hays, Beldenville, WI, USA; Kate Gilpin, Richmond, CA, USA; Mark Osiecki, Heidelberg, GERMANY; Mary, Seattle, WA, USA; Nan Stefanik, Newfane VT, USA; Michele Armstrong, Cupertino, CA, USA; Richard J. Lee, Oakland, CA, USA; Robert Crosby, Redmond, OR, USA; Sarah Cherry, Melburne, AUSTRALIA; Scott Butki, Austin, TX, USA; Scott Hooker, Albuquerque, NM, USA; Stephen Engel, Portland OR, USA; Susan Uskudarli, Istanbul,TURKEY; Tom Whitmore, Seattle, WA, USA; Valerie Bock, Decatur, IL, USA; Ward Bell,  Minneapolis, MN USA; Will Osiecki, Montreal, QC

portrait, Jennifer

portrait, Jennifer, Paonia, Colorado, October ©2021 hopkins/neoscenes.
portrait, Jennifer, Paonia, Colorado, October ©2021 hopkins/neoscenes.

portrait, Jennifer, Paonia, Colorado, October ©2021 hopkins/neoscenes.
portrait, Jennifer, Paonia, Colorado, October ©2021 hopkins/neoscenes.

portrait, Jennifer, Paonia, Colorado, October ©2021 hopkins/neoscenes.
portrait, Jennifer, Paonia, Colorado, October ©2021 hopkins/neoscenes.

the feral grin

smartphones: images, selfies, fazebuch, instaham: the profusion of masks that appear on social media screens illustrate how much humanity has been stripped from the reductive process of the portrait and the self-portrait.

Frozen grins: the perfectly engineered white teeth of middle class prosperity. Forced from the gullet of consumption. Masks all, covering the psycho-spiritual emptiness of those same middle class lives.

Anthony Zega 1962 – 2019

death

[Ed: I will continue with these remembrances, in the moment this is all I can manage to compose.]

I’m tired of writing remembrances, each one reminds of the passing, fading nature of be-ing. I don’t need to be reminded that Life closes off, a box canyon with sheer varigated walls, cross-cut sediments of past-time on display. Fossilized life, fragments of bone, amber protrude from the sheer layered walls. Evidence of those who went before. Where are they? what are they doing? Somehow, Anthony’s passing clears something away, psychically: that he has made the transition, into the Bardo, and beyond. Not that he deserved it at his age, but that he was released from the physical ravages that cancer was imposing on his body. Following him, and the expanding number of others, will perhaps be less terrifying.

portrait, Anthony, Boulder, Colorado, December 1987

I met Anthony on the way out the door of Parson’s photo department building on 5th Avenue, just north of Washington Square Park, in the fall of 1985.

“The primary principle of this age in the West is decay.”

Yup. That resonated, still does. As elsewhere noted, that profound and concise observation marked the beginning of a long friendship that explored the surfaces of the world and the energies and patterns of flow behind those surfaces. It maintained itself for 34 years despite the infrequent crossings-of-path. Aside for a year or so when we were house-mates in a couple places in Boulder, it took the form of a rich correspondance along with the occasional meetings-up that were always electric. Princeton, Manhattan, Peters Valley, Newton, and then all the locales experienced on a handful of profound road-trips in the US West. Death Valley (including a legendary night in Las Vegas on New Years Eve — photographing the insanity of the place); across the Rez’ in Arizona, picking up hitch-hikers; dealing with extreme weather transiting the Colorado Rockies; time at the Great Sand Dunes; and all the while, closely observing the perfidy of the contemporary capitalist oligarchies and, if nothing else, making fun of it. National Dead People. Stick Puppets on Display. The George P. Schultz Delirium Tremens Telephone. He left the East Coast in 1987 or so, and engaged in a long meander around the West, deeply influenced by his encounters with the Native American cultures and histories. His passionate, spirited, sensitive, and brilliant intellect — a full-spectrum laser — initiated a reducing flux that operated powerfully in his poetic work. None of it easily consumed, he did not share it with more that a handful of people ever.

Our last day shared together was in 2014, a long one spent at the Met, wandering through Strawberry Fields and Central Park, and dinner at the Whole Foods cafeteria on the Upper West Side near his mother’s flat where he’d been living for a few years. He had been worn down by the ignominy of working in the retail “adrenalized sporting complex”. But he had also met Maite, a Catalonian woman, who he joined in Barcelona in 2016. Best that he was out of the US for the repugnance of oligarchy and destruction that has ensued.

The written word was his primary medium in more recent years, although his photographic work was an important and powerful expression as well. It was the case, however, that he was intensely private, and most of his creative output came in the form of letters, and for the last decade more than a thousand emails that included an image, a dense poetic work, or a carefully laid-out pdf word piece, or some combination of those. In the mid-80s he did have a few prose pieces published in Marvin Jones’ The New Common Good in New York City, as their “Western Correspondent”. The only one I have a copy of is an excerpt of “The Tourist“. All of his negatives and writings up to relatively recently were apparently lost to flooding at his mother’s place in Princeton. It appears that I am more-or-less the sole holder of his remaining artistic legacy: with a fat folder of beautifully hand-penned communications.

From a letter I wrote to Anthony, back in 1991, from what was home, then, Reykjavík:

There is a bit of nostalgia in my mind, but more, there is the respect for you as a creator, discoverer, synthesist, See-er, and, um, Voice-of-Consciousness from the Mouth of Chaos, more or less. (I find meself writing in Literal ways these days, unable to couch clearly or veil rightly, no figures dancing between the words). I have your three cards sitting, always self-aware, they are, there on the desk next to the Printer. In a small attic space, ceiling too low for me to stand, but fine to write, skylights at my back open to a 20-hour sun day. (Fela doin’ “Zombie”). I can feel the plasma mass pressure of the sun Light pressing down, trying to flatten the landscape into a line, a mote, but the earth is in constant retching here, heaving basalt sky-ward, building sites, Places for the People to live. You have fed me bits from a variety of Others — Others speaking about Others — or a saying about unsay-able things or, yes, That which is … … … Thank you.

Anthony isn’t well

Your generosity is welcomed: A GoFundMe site has been set up to assist with his medical and living expenses. The GoFundMe didn’t work — they had problems with producing ‘official’ documents to the GoFundMe platform to do the bank transfers. His situation is very hard, the doctors say they can do nothing more for him. It is not clear, but I believe that he is on hospice care now. Another friend has been communicating with his wife, but I have not been successful in contacting her via text.

It is not noted on that site, but Anthony is an artist/poet — you can find some of his short works on this very site.

portrait, Anthony, Boulder, Colorado, December 1987

Justin Kaipo Kaoni 1976 – 2018

death

It was a shock to receive this news. Indeed, all the loving words in his obit are true. Justin worked his deft and skilled magic on the ponderosas in my yard there in Prescott. But far more than that, he was a beautiful, affable, intelligent human presence in the lives that he touched. Generous with his time and energies, he always carried others around him to a Lighter and more profound moment. In a small way, I documented some of his tree-work with audio and some portraits over the years — his presence will be greatly missed, never forgotten. Indeed, his influence on the ecosystem of the area will live on far beyond human years.

portrait, Chase, Justin, and Nick, Prescott, Arizona, April 2015

On Friday, Dec. 7, 2018, the world lost one of its best people. Justin Kaipo Kaoni, inventor of the karate chop dance move, was called home by his creator.

Justin was born in Lahaina, Hawaii, to Chris and Sam Kaoni on Oct. 20, 1976.

As a young child, you could find him swinging from a banyan tree or roaming Wahikuli beach in search of seashells and sand crabs. At age six, the family relocated to Prescott, Arizona, where he would make the ponderosa pine forest his playground for the remainder of his life.

Everyone who met Justin was touched by his relentless love of life and genuine presence of being. His intellect, foresight and humble leadership was sought out by anyone who had a problem to solve or a project to build. In his career as owner/operator of Mile High Tree Service, he spent many days in the canopy with his crew removing branches and treetops. Nimble as a ring-tailed lemur and strong as an ox, he would perform the work of three men while wearing an ear-to-ear grin. He protected the city of Prescott as a former Granite Mountain Hotshot and defensible space ninja.

He turned superhero at night as adopter of strays (human and canine), distributor of smiles/sage advice, and midnight snack chef. Purveyor of good eats, his home kitchen has a Michelin star and no shortage of loyal patrons.

On a lucky night in Las Vegas, Justin met the love of his life when he crossed paths with Shannon Rhoades of Riverside, California. A few years later, they were married on a perfect spring evening, May 6, 2006. Together they raised three amazing children, Shane, Elena and Chaz, who continue to make their father and family proud every day. Shannon and Justin’s profound love for each other has never faded in 12 years of marriage, as affirmed by their recent renewal of vows at the place where they met.

Justin was proficient in everything he spent time doing, but was best at spreading love and positivity. He will be remembered by everyone who was lucky enough to meet him (even just once).

He is survived by his wife, Shannon; children, Shane, Elena and Chaz; father, Samuel; sister, Sierra; and brothers, Brad and Kaikea. He was predeceased by his mother, Chris Kaoni-Turner.

An awesome celebration of life will be held at Mountain Club Clubhouse, Sunday, Dec. 16, at 1 p.m., 900 W. Clubhouse Drive, Prescott, Arizona. All are welcome to be a part of the Kaoni ‘ohana (family) for the day and come share a story about this amazing person.

In lieu of flowers, have a laugh and meal with a close friend in his honor, or donate to the Eric Marsh Foundation for Wildland Firefighters @ https://ericmarshfoundation.org.

Information provided by survivors.

dear Jules is gone

death

Julietta Luna Natalia (12 December 1999 — 04 March 2019)

Julietta Luna, Louisville, Colorado, December 2017 (Credit: Dona Laurita)

Can there be words? Words that aid in sharing the loss, words that distribute the vast sorrow among those remaining. Can all souls on the planet share this terrible passing, with sighing, with singing, with tears, with a rage against the dying of this singular Light?