On a warm day we went down to the ocean and had coffee on the beach, where they had raised their prices ten cents a drink!
Luckily I have a lot of loose change, piles of it. And, as an aside, not just the small stuff either. Ones and twos can accumulate in one's pocket if one is not careful to spend it. And oddly, shopkeepers will sometimes either:
A. Ask you for all kinds of specific change requests to help with the shortcomings at their registers, or
B. Apologetically give you 8.72 change for your 20 euro bill all in coins because five euro bills are strangely rare here sometimes.
"B" has been happening a lot to me lately.
But this is not the subject of today's post.
And don't worry. It is not the World Cup either.
After coffee we walked up the beach to old town and bought potatoes and arugula from our favorite seller there, who hates pennies of any kind. And we also went to the photography museum, which our city museum pass card gets us into for free!
This is the subject of today's post!
We counted it out and determined we were 60 percent successful with shows at the photography museum (it has no permanent collection). We loved the guy who did multi hour exposure photos of mostly landscapes for instance, but the woman exploring the "beauty" of "all kinds" of women felt a bit disingenous and didn't quite cut it with us. This new exhibition today was called "Levitation".
The photographer, an athlete and dancer, took pictures of himself mostly, but sometimes others, in carefully constructed moments at the height of elaborate leaps, giving him the look of someone suspended in the air in dramatic locations and in dramatic, space defying poses.
I didn't like them at first, but my negativity is often unnecessary and if I can get rid of it, I do my best to do so. They were often elegant and interesting in an instagram way, so it wasn't a big surprise that he has found much success first on Instagram and suchlike. There was a very pretty film of his work that seemed to include a lot of advertising work he had done as well, which was pretty too, but not the sort of thing to make one respect his work and vision more. But it was fun to look at.
I did feel like the information about the show wanted to make sure you knew these were real, unaltered photos of real scenes. And I can see their interest in that, in this day in age.
Nevertheless, it got me thinking mischievously and I took some pictures of the gallery and the show. And then I did the following.
Are they homage? Affectionate teasing? Outright trolling?
Yeah, probably.














