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Izzy Rael — beginning,

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Artist Initiative recipient Izzy Rael is “not your average cookie” — the teenager spends her spare time creating recipes, making short films, practicing graphic design, and documenting her interests and explorations on her website.

“beginning,” will be the culmination of Rael’s Artist Initiative project, a book that is a collection of recipes, travel photos, and DIY projects. Her style is playful and thoughtful, elevating her interests from mere childhood hobbies to works of art.

Read Rael’s full interview with Artist Initiative here, and follow her on her VSCO.


Abstract

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Day after day, we are astounded by the remarkable imagery that our community continues to share. As 2015 draws to a close, we’d like to celebrate the talent and artistry we’ve seen this year in a series of ‘Best of’ posts, highlighting the best photographs of different themes. We hope to reflect on some shining moments, and continue to inspire all your creative endeavors in the coming year.

Cheers.

Image by Angelojunes / SE2 preset

Image by Tricia Lara / G3 preset

Image by Michael Anthony / A5 preset

Image by bdaneshgar

Image by Billy Stocker / P5 preset

Image by Justine Gabrielle / G3 preset

Image by rmbacon

Image by Brett / 04 preset

Image by ddpxl

Image by artisticfreedom / C1 preset

Image by adambirkan / A5 preset

Image by born superstar / KK2 preset

Image by Natalie McComas / F2 preset

Image by Ville Westerlund / KK1 preset

Best of #SayHello

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Thank you for your #SayHello submissions this holiday season, showing that in a community as global as this, there is no one right way to celebrate family, friends, and holiday cheer.

Check out the images below for some notable highlights, and be sure to continue sharing and tagging your images with #SayHello for the chance to be curated into the Say Hello Collection.

Happy Holidays!

Image by Lara Austin Shoop / HB2 preset

Image by Navroop Kular / B4 preset

Image by Dina Alfasi / 05 preset

Image by Zach Louw

Image by Katie Crawmer / S1 preset

Image by Casey Wiegand

Image by Zach Louw

Image by Sepehr Abdoli / G3 preset

Image by Kelly Sweda

Image by Nels Evangelista / A6 preset

Image by Janet Davie / A5 preset

Image by Zach Louw

Image by Breanne Rodgers / C2 preset

Movement

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Day after day, we are astounded by the remarkable imagery that our community continues to share. As 2015 draws to a close, we’d like to celebrate the talent and artistry we’ve seen this year in a series of ‘Best of’ posts, highlighting the best photographs of different themes. We hope to reflect on some shining moments, and continue to inspire all your creative endeavors in the coming year.

Cheers.

Image by Emma Fineman / A6 preset

Image by feshoots / B1 preset

Image by Amanda Paige / HB2 preset

Image by sofcarrot / HB1 preset

Image by savigi

Image by Elin Grip / F2 preset

Image by peduckk / A8 preset

Image by magmoran / F2 preset

Image by Chris Cody / E3 preset

Image by Jazek Karnick / 7HB1 preset

Image by Anthony Phillips / G3 preset

Image by James Han / A6 preset

Image by Kenneth Nguyen

Image by Todd Kener

Image by k1a99p8 / C1 preset

Image by zackdilaroca

Image by Sarah Lopez / B4 preset

Image by ruben328 / HB2 preset

Image by Lachlan Tompsett / HB2 preset

Image by graccemckelvvey / HB2 preset

Image by jeyanethaji / G3 preset

Image by Vilma Rylander

Portraits

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Day after day, we are astounded by the remarkable imagery that our community continues to share. As 2015 draws to a close, we’d like to celebrate the talent and artistry we’ve seen this year in a series of ‘Best of’ posts, highlighting the best photographs of different themes. We hope to reflect on some shining moments, and continue to inspire all your creative endeavors in the coming year.

Cheers.

Image by Sierra Odessa

Image by Chris Cody / A6 preset

Image by Marcus Stabenow

Image by Lawrence Agyei / A6 preset

Image by Lennox Bishop / A4 preset

Image by Yumna Al-Arashi

Image by faizbasroh / HB2 preset

Image by Hannah Faith

Image by R.J. Hartbeck

Image by Alyssa Renee / C1 preset

Image by Tony Gum / A4 preset

Image by Joseph Greer

Image by Jimi Agboola / Q2 preset

Image by Kasheem Daniels

Image by Fabian Palencia / 04 preset

Image by Mark Roudebush / 03 preset

Image by desmoney / B5 preset

Image by William Ukoh / S3 preset

Image by Simbarashe Cha / C7 preset

Image by Whitney Hayes

Artist Initiative

Us

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Day after day, we are astounded by the remarkable imagery that our community continues to share. As 2015 draws to a close, we’d like to celebrate the talent and artistry we’ve seen this year in a series of ‘Best of’ posts, highlighting the best photographs of different themes. We hope to reflect on some shining moments, and continue to inspire all your creative endeavors in the coming year.

Cheers.

Image by Nasrin Suleiman / C3 preset

Image by Olivia Facchin / C1 preset

Image by ksilvers / B1 preset

Image by Joash Phang

Image by Michael Tabtabai / E1 preset

Image by Yap Chee Hong

Image by bkateeee / M5 preset

Image by Nabil Azizi / SE3 preset

Image by Roong Kunvara / A4 preset

Image by Irwin Centama / A6 preset

Image by Syazwan Lubis / K1 preset

Image by Grace Burke / C1 preset

Image by sabrinaroseb / C1 preset

Image by Zhomart Aralbaiuly

Image by Dave Brownlee / M6 preset

Image by Pei Szan

Image by Emma Jane Conway / F2 preset

Image by Mina Fahlvik / F2 preset

Image by Anya Bershader / M5 preset

Image by Kjersti Berglund / G3 preset

Image by Luna Courtois / A7 preset

Image by Ignacio Semerene / SE3 preset

Image by Megan Pinkerton / F2 preset

Image by Jodie Griggs / LV2 preset

Image by princessraniau / C1 preset

Happy New Year

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Here’s to wishing our community the very best for the new year. May you celebrate and explore new creative endeavors, and challenge yourself in the pursuit of this beautiful, broken, creative life.

Image by Rachel Weissman/ C1 preset


Hiraeth: A St. Louis Story

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Photographer Sierra Odessa shares her thoughts and a series of photos from her Artist Initiative project Hiraeth: A St. Louis Story. Hiraeth, a Welsh word that is often described as “homesickness tinged with grief or sadness for the lost or departed”, was an important idea to Odessa, as she spent time documenting her hometown. But the desolate streets of St. Louis proved a challenge, both photographically and emotionally, and Odessa decided to focus on themes surrounding the idea of home.

Read more about Odessa’s project here, and follow along on her VSCO.

The Art Hoe Collective

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If you’ve seen #artho or #arthoe cropping up all over social media, you’ll quickly realize that it’s more than just another hashtag or selfie trend — it’s a movement.

According to Mars, the 15-year-old co-founder of this political-art movement, “the purpose of the Art Hoe Collective is to provide an inclusive and innovative platform for POC.” Mars goes on to explain that, as a non-binary person of color, they rarely see the groups with which they identify portrayed prominently in art or media, and that's something they want to change.

Read the full interview with Mars and Myles, a curator for the Art Hoe Collective. Share and tag your images with #artincolor to contribute to the movement, and follow along on the Art Hoe Collective VSCO.

What is Art Hoe Collective's purpose? Can you explain the selfies taken with backgrounds of fine art?

MARS: As a collective we believe that representation is key for a platform that wants to give a voice to marginalized groups… As POC we acknowledge that we are constantly being exploited, disregarded, manipulated, or subdued. It’s time that we have an empowering platform that works to defy what holds us back.

MYLES: When I first found Mars on Tumblr, I saw [the selfies] gracefully posed against a Renaissance painting. As the Art Hoe movement grew, more and more people started doing them. These superimposed selfies have become an Art Hoe trademark, and are a way for people of color to literally insert themselves into famous works of art. POC aren’t often seen in the paintings in art museums, so what better way to peacefully protest that than by pasting yourself on top of Sandro Botticelli’s “The Birth of Venus” or Vincent Van Gogh’s “Starry Night”? These selfies are not simply for aesthetics, they are a form of rebellion, they contain a powerful message.

What’s the importance of the demographics of creatives you choose to highlight through your collective?

MYLES: It’s essential that we focus on marginalized creatives because of their obvious lack of representation in mainstream media. It’s hard for most people to name many POC, LGBT, or disabled creatives off the top of their head. How many black trans painters do you know? How many disabled poets do you know? Representation is everything! When we shine a spotlight on a latinx dancer, or a black photographer, it inspires others to continue creating, promotes diversity, and uplifts the entire community.

You focus on groups that deal with great adversity and oppression; what do you find the collective has done for the emerging participants in your communities?

MYLES: Currently we’ve been giving them access to an audience larger than what they may have been able to access on their own. Our instagram account is currently at 19.1k followers, so when we post someone's work it’s very possible that thousands of people will see it. A few of our regular contributors have been contacted for interviews, and have been featured in other blogs after being published on Art Hoe Collective. As we grow and develop, we want to be able to provide more tangible resources for the creatives that we cater to, and really help them to get their feet wet in the creative world.

MARS: The Art Hoe Collective, while still in its infancy, has done a lot for the empowerment of POC. But there is room for improvement. To acknowledge groups who deal with oppression you must pinpoint their struggles and not subdue their voices. Especially if your platform works to reform these social, political, and economic injustices. The narratives of marginalized groups are constantly dimmed and exploited. Society presents a vague acknowledgement to the severity of their oppression. Their voices are minimized. It’s imperative to have these people on our platform and not continue to speak for them.

What are some of the struggles and triumphs of running an online-based community and collective?

MYLES: One of the biggest triumphs is definitely the ability to reach people worldwide. We’ve had submissions from pretty much every continent, and most of our following comes from places all over the world. Being online is also great for immediate feedback and interaction with your audience.

MARS: Since our platform is online it’s subjected to manipulation and misinterpretation. When you’re online you’re easily subjected to criticism because you’re always being observed. This can be both overwhelming and frustrating. On the [other hand] our project can reach a broad range of participants when being broadcasted on social media. The conversation isn’t narrow if it’s being dissected and chatted about from an online community. This leaves room for the respectability politics within these marginalized communities to grow and intersect.

What’s next for the movement? For yourselves?

MARS: We are currently working to expand the collective to a website and possibly push the movement outside of social media. Right now we are working on curating shows and making a name for ourselves. We are also trying to create a balance between our school work and extracurriculars. My personal goal is to to gain self assurance and realize the impact I’ve made on people. I’m the youngest in the collective so I really want to push myself as a creative and as a person. This is the age where you start forming your own opinions and politics. Everything right now is an ongoing learning process for me.

MYLES: Although we are still in our infancy, the collective has gained notoriety and a strong following of creatives and non-creatives from all walks of life. In spite of all this, we are still quite a long way from our goal. Creating opportunities for marginalized artists is a huge part of our core values, and we plan on doing so through community outreach — hosting events for local creatives to show their work and network with others. Whats next for me? Well, in the next year I’ll be graduating and hopefully moving on to art school in New York City, so I want to network, and create and discover myself. In addition, I just want to keep doing my best to maintain and improve upon what we do at Art Hoe Collective.

Share and tag your images with #artincolor to contribute to the movement, and follow along on the Art Hoe Collective VSCO.

*This interview has been edited and condensed.

Undefeated

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Within VSCO, Collections is a way to discover and connect with others in the VSCO community. Interact with the creatives who move you most by sharing and publishing their work to your Collection.

The Collection Undefeated pulls together work that showcases the very essence of physical activity. Strength, skill, ambition are all visible when scrolling through this Collection, which taps into the mindset of an athlete: the strength to push oneself to the limit, and the humility to keep striving when we believe ourselves to be spent.

View the Collection at vsco.co/undefeated.

Image by Anton Lithén / M5 preset

Image by Jesse Wilson / B1 preset

Image by Jonathan House

Image by Cameron Lampinen / F2 preset

Image by vibuiphoto / C2 preset

Image by Tim Feeny

Image by Victory Journal

Sean Pecknold

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As the VSCO Artist Initiative™ program continues to grow, we want to make sure we highlight the artists in addition to their projects. After all, these are people who, amidst their project challenges, hold down jobs, tend to loved ones, and have stories to tell.

Photographer and animator Sean Pecknold has an exploratory personality — something that comes through in his creative work as he experiments with mediums and forms. As part of the Artist Initiative project, he has created The Unknown, two short films in which unique protagonists search for something more. Driven by movement and wanderlust, these films exemplify Pecknold’s own desires to never stop exploring.

Read the full interview here.

This is VSCO

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As humans, we’re compelled to create; it’s the radical expression of each person’s voice in this world. And creativity isn’t limited to an artistic class. It takes different forms and reflects the individual’s own unpredictable, winding path.

Not limited to the polished aspects of life, it embraces all facets of human existence, the ups and downs, the serene and the chaotic. Here, we tell the story of our people, adding their layers to the multidimensional, textured creativity on VSCO.

In the coming weeks, we will be highlighting six individuals from our community: an ex-model navigating her way through Tokyo, a new voice for music emerging in LA, a Manhattan teenager figuring things out, a young graphic artist exploring design in the UK, a Brooklyn-based director of photography and aspiring chef, and an Australian artist translating his musical background into other creative fields.

These are stories that span borders and niches, bridging together those who celebrate this beautiful, broken, creative, and utterly human life.

How do you #DefineShape?

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Define is a quarterly magazine founded by Amanda Jane Jones, the founding art director of Kinfolk Magazine. Each issue focuses on defining a single word, through the work of contributing artists. Issue 001 was all about Fear, because “being an artist takes courage. Each of us has fears, and the way we choose to face them is unique.” It was a beautiful and interesting first case study that featured the work of 14 contributors from a range of backgrounds, everything from photography to sculpting to writing.

The second issue will focus on defining Shape — and Define Magazine is looking for submissions from the VSCO community. From now until midnight PST on 1/24, share to your VSCO the original content that explores the dedicated theme, and tag your images with #DefineShape. Select submissions will be showcased on Define Magazine’s Collection, and some may be featured in the printed issue of Define: Shape, slated to hit shelves in March.

Image by fotografiamagaz

Image by Yanhor Ho / M3 preset

Image by chuongbee / B1 preset

Image by Jeff Guerrero / HB1 preset

Image by kitato / N1 preset

Image by Kevin Mao / M6 preset

Share to VSCO and tag your images with #DefineShape from now until midnight PST on 1/24, and be sure to keep an eye on Define Magazine’s Collection to see if your work is highlighted.

Korey Dane — The Lion & The Keeper

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For the third film in the Live From series, Venue travels to California to frame the music of Korey Dane within the solitude and open spaces of the High Desert. Dane performs “The Lion & The Keeper” from his recently released album, Youngblood. He captivates on an empty stage at a local renowned roadhouse, and concludes the performance under the Joshua Tree sky at his father’s secluded desert home.

Watch the performance on Venue.

Photographs by Cameron McCool


01

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Presenting a series of creative collaborations with members of our global community as an ongoing effort to understand who we are.

“I need to know that I came to the right place. I need to know that I can be ok here,” Cailin Hill candidly shares about the uncertainty of shaping her future in the wake of retiring from her modeling career and building her life as a foreigner in Japan. “I never feel secure. I never felt secure modeling. I never felt like I had a future or a plan; you just kind of go aimlessly in one direction and hope that things come together.” Disenchanted by what modeling could realistically offer her, Cailin sought to establish herself as a voice beyond her role as a model. She launched The Model Burnbook early into her career as both a frank look at the seemingly glamorous modeling industry and a creative outlet for her writing and photography.

“There’s not a lot of people telling you what you need to do when it doesn’t work out,” Cailin says. “When modeling ends, you have to already have a plan. Once you realize that your modeling career is over, it’s too late…. What I’m trying to do now is move on.” One step at a time, Cailin is constructing a creative career beyond the confines of modeling, one that’s not dependent on who you know or what cultural ideal you fit. This includes creating Tokyo-based content for international fashion brands. She’s also launched her own online vintage shop curated with select pieces from her travels as a model.

But questions linger about what might have been. “I’m constantly wondering, like, how would things be different if I was in Canada, how would things be different if I had stayed in New York…. It’s really easy to be caught up in being a foreigner here, and the difference in being in Tokyo and being anywhere else in the world is Japanese people are incredibly tolerant of your not understanding. You don’t need Japanese to get by. But you never really belong.”

It was this sense of not belonging — whether in the modeling industry or as a foreigner in Japan — that allowed Cailin to find her voice. Being an outsider fuels Cailin’s sharp, poignant perspective, on display in her musings on daily life as a retired model navigating Tokyo. And the challenges she faces only magnify her desire to achieve success on an international scale, and ultimately, to lead a fulfilling life. “When I ask people, ‘What do you want to do with your life?’ [They answer,] ‘I want to make money, I want to have a family, I want to support my family,’ but it’s hard to meet people that want more.”

Her restlessness is unmistakable: “I feel like, I don’t know where any of this is going anymore. It’s really easy to lose focus in Tokyo…. It’s so isolating being here.” But amidst the loneliness and struggle of daily life, Cailin desires something beyond the intended life she left behind as a model in New York, or even as a student in Ontario. “I need to create my own world and stand behind the choices that I’ve made.”

The best thing you ever told me
was that I got off the grid
and that you were jealous.
Damn, I never thought about it like that.
Like New York was something I got free from
instead of what I ran from.
Guess that made an impression on me.
When I take the train in the morning
Japan stares back at me now.
I shrug through it's side streets
and give up my responsibilities to the past.
Not belonging is the most powerful feeling
I have ever known.
And I am no longer kept up at night
wondering what must be happening
in the far corners of the universe.
Because finally
I am home.

Photography and footage by Cailin Hill

Music by Ian Hill

Poem by Cailin Hill

Produced by VSCO

FOG Design + Art

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In its third year, FOG Design + Art welcomed both art enthusiasts and first time fair visitors to experience a unique event dedicated to bridging the gap between modern design and contemporary art. The fair not only included a notable list of over 40 exhibitors, but also educational programming that included film screenings and lectures, directed towards both artists and the casual art admirer.

See more images from the FOG Design + Art here.

Jason Jacques Inc.

Artist Kim Simonsson - Jason Jacques Inc.

Artist Trevor Paglen - Altman Siegel

Artist Iris Eichenberg - Ornamentum

Best of #DefineShape

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Thank you for all your #DefineShape submissions. The different explorations of this theme were beautiful and inspiring, contributing to several pages of amazing imagery in Define Magazine’s Collection.

For this challenge, the Define team found the ambiguity most compelling for Issue 002, and was ultimately drawn to the interpretations that took a more abstract approach. See below for their selection of images that will be featured in the print issue, and check out their Collection for more explorations of this theme.

Image by Axel Oswith

Image by Paul Edmondson

Image by Evgeniya Righini-Brand

Image by Shawn Roller

Image by Austin Willis

Image by Timothy Mulcare

Oakland Murals

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Over the last six months, Oakland, California has become home for three large-scale murals, created through Athen B. Gallery. Muralists are often not properly recognized for their contributions to the art world, but through Athen B. Gallery, four local artists were able to bring their work to the forefront of the conversation.

Read more on the Artist Initiative VSCO here.

02

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Presenting a series of creative collaborations with members of our global community as an ongoing effort to understand who we are.

“It’s just life for me, and I’m loving every single bit of it,” says Asmah Williams, a 21-year-old university student, joyfully declaring her passion for art and design. A native of Nigeria now studying business in the UK, Asmah never saw herself as a creative person or considered art to be a viable profession. Growing up in Africa, where she was expected to be a doctor or lawyer, there was no room for creativity, she shares.

But for Asmah, creating is as natural as breathing. As she describes it, art isn’t reserved for intellectuals; it’s in everything we do. Art is seeing the sun rise in the morning and the vibrant color of the city bus against traffic. It’s in the design of objects integrated into our daily lives, like tables and chairs.

Asmah doesn’t like to give herself a label, because she finds it limiting. Creating is simply an essential part of her life, one that grows more important every day. She began taking pictures on her mobile phone when she first arrived at university, and out of a restless desire for more, began to add lines and geometric designs to the photos using a simple mobile app. “I love the use of graphics and shapes in my creative work. [They] transform my image into something more than I originally intended. I love the feel that shapes give, which is quite subjective to the viewer, and it allows them to interpret it in correlation to their emotion. When I create, I leave that space to make something different from the original image.”

Asmah professes to be just starting out in her creative journey and is eager to keep exploring. “I never sat down and said, ‘I want to be an artist, a photographer,’ but every day I love it more and more. It’s just life, everything I want to breathe. What drives me to create is a passion. Creating every day brings life into things, transforms existence. It’s just my opportunity to be heard, and to express myself in a creative form is an important part of my growth.”

Artwork, photography, and footage by Asmah Williams

Music by Domenique Dumont

Produced by VSCO

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