>>3702723>But isn't your whole shtick about the subtle changes that happen to your environment over time, and then capturing it with rephotography? Do you feel that driving down one road in a town is enough to say that you've actually been there? Isn't that contradictory to your premise?Can't practice rephotography in places I can't reasonably visit season after season, I just practice regular photography there.
>It's why I suggest moving somewhere. You stay somewhere new long enough that the novelty wears off and it starts to feel like a new home, something that you don't compare to another home. You'll find that people live in all sorts of different ways around the country, and not all of them are hayseed bumpkins. You gain new perspectives, new insights, new challenges, which you then take back to the country.You sound like someone that hated his hometown but never met most of the people in it, which is fitting with the "move away, I did!" persona
Excellent larping there
>It's kind of like speaking two languages, which is something that, I THINK, you can't do.Chim aboha yut kotoma
retard
>If photography is your language, you only speak Alabama right nowIf you're trying to compare this to languages, then the languages are rural americana, suburbia, and the urban wasteland.
Rural Americana is the same language across the country, there are simply vernaculars within that language. I prefer not to colonize the vernaculars of others. That's cringe.
>Do you think that Christenberry would been quite as successful if he had stayed South for his entire life? Or do you think that his experiences in New York and DC enriched his perspective and helped him expand his vocabulary?I think it's quite ridiculous to compare the reality of needing to move into the city in the 60s to the need in 2020, during a wave in which people are actually moving *into* the rural countryside again to escape the 'rona.
Watch less animated cartoons.