// Fall + Winter 2013 //
www.broken-arrows-clothing.tumblr.com
Noah Kahan
wallacepolsom
Show & Tell

#extradirty

Kiana Khansmith
macklin celebrini has autism

shark vs the universe
Three Goblin Art

Kaledo Art
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
art blog(derogatory)

tannertan36
Stranger Things

⁂
Xuebing Du

@theartofmadeline

blake kathryn
tumblr dot com
h

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

seen from Jordan
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Portugal

seen from Italy
seen from Venezuela
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
@feralmagazine
// Fall + Winter 2013 //
www.broken-arrows-clothing.tumblr.com
BROKEN ARROWS CLOTHING
FALL/WINTER 2013
Sneak Peek only available @ www.broken-arrows-clothing.tumblr.com
Olivia Franklin speaks frankly about her Faith & sets the record straight on what it means to be a Chrisitan.
In two paragraphs Describe Yourself.
I would describe myself as a lover of God and of His people, a lover of nature and of words and of all things good and beautiful. I am just a person who desires to connect with others, hearing their stories and relating, genuinely sympathizing with the down trodden and broken-hearted. These are the things I know that I am called to do, and although I don’t always do the best job of it 100% of the time, when I’m doing these things I feel the ultimate fulfillment that comes from serving God and furthering His kingdom.
What was it like to go from parochial school to public school?
The transition from private Christian school to a public school turned out to be such an awesome blessing. I was delighted to find that I could be so much more of an encouragement to those who were struggling with the troubles that come with adolescence or a bad home situation when I was in a public school environment. I felt like I was doing what I was made to do when I was taking an interest in people’s lives by offering a listening ear, or by making someone feel welcome to talk with me. I feel like the years I spent in Christian school did a good job of preparing me spiritually and strengthening me to help others and be a beacon of light to them later on in my life.
What do you think of society?
I feel like we live in a society saturated by so many false ideals and misplaced values. The focus on financial gain and stability, the pursuit of “The American Dream” (i.e planning, saving, investing in order to have a nice house, car, material things) are not scriptural values. We are surrounded by so much that is artificial, our souls cry out for something genuine and raw and tangible.
Tell me, what keeps your faith strong in these trying times?
Knowing I have a Creator who knows me more intimately than anyone, and adores me despite the knowledge of the depths of my heart and of every one of my worst flaws gives me more peace than I have ever known. This is what keeps me going, this is what I draw from when the world has broken me down.
Do you ever doubt?
I am an advocate of doubts because facing them promotes growth. All of the doubts I have had caused me to search deeper and to seek God’s truth more, causing me to grow into an even greater knowledge of who He is and expanding my mind. When I pray for God to open my eyes to new things, I am always amazed by what He shows me.
Where did it go wrong? What do you have to say to people who have, shall we say, misrepresented Christianity?
To those who have misrepresented Christ with an attitude of hate and exclusiveness and false religion: I pray that you would come in contact with the real Jesus. The Jesus who promotes Redemption, Reconciliation, and Above ALL things, L O V E. I pray that your heart would be opened to love those who Jesus loves. I pray that you would experience the real spirit of God and its transformative power. Most of all, I pray that your grace would abound.
What is okay: bringing the Gospel to a world that is so desperately searching for something lasting and meaningful by devoting our lives to love and service of others.
What is not okay: looking down on the people we are called to love, separating ourselves from the community by putting up invisible barriers that make our churches seem like exclusive clubs.
Do you have any sort of mystical belief?
I feel like when you get down to it, all religions are basically the same, like if you strip them down to their essentials they fundamentally teach the same thing; which is, basically, the brotherhood and sisterhood of people and the universal fatherhood of God.
There is a lot of common ground between them like basic values and morality, but the thing that distinguishes Christianity and Christ is that Jesus taught the opposite of what other religions teach when he told us that none of us can do anything to merit heaven, so we might as well stop trying to. The factor of grace is what distinguishes Christianity from other teachings for me, because, I feel like, Christianity is the only way in which God reaches out to us instead of us striving to reach God or be our own God. My belief system is based on the sanctity of the Bible. I believe that the scriptures are Spirit-breathed, like a love story written directly to us from the Creator. I believe that the words are relevant throughout time and on this I base my beliefs.
How do you feel about other sects of Christianity?
When it comes to sects and denominations of Christianity, I feel like we are all united under our belief in the divinity of Christ and our universal goals of effectively loving His people. These are the matters of first importance, having dissenting opinions throughout denominations about less important matters is inevitable.
If you could relate yourself to one character in the bible who would it be?
I would love to be able to relate with David’s closeness to God’s heart and the joy he displayed in dancing before the Lord.
I’m afraid my inconsistency, stubbornness, and the grace God shows me so continually is more reminiscent of the Israelites.
Who do you find the most inspiring?
The person I find the most inspiring would undoubtedly be the apostle Paul. He was first a persecutor of Christians redeemed by God and then tirelessly dedicated to spreading the Gospel. This is a man who was excellent at making the message of salvation simple and relevant to the culture he was in.
Can you give us your interpretation, in a nutshell, of Jesus’ message for Christians today?
The message of Jesus has always been love of God and love of others. His message to us is to seek justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with our God. He is a lover of the outcasts, the misfits, those deemed unacceptable by society. These are the people he welcomes in with open arms and commands us to do the same. We are to help those who cannot help themselves. Our first response to anything that happens in this world should be to extend love and compassion. We seek Him to be filled, and then we, in turn, fill others with the meaning that we’ve found.
———————————————————
To see more of Ms. Franklin, and the awesome dress she has on
mosey on over to
www.broken-arrows-clothing.tumblr.com
and see what else she’s advertising!!
——————————
follow her on tumblr!
www.wellhiolivia.tumblr.com
Preston Taylor [ fairest of them all ] speaks on:
Gender-Based Hatred, Androgynous modeling, and Justice for All.
Though all of the listed subjects have been heavily covered, a new face would like to shed some limelight on the subject. Preston Taylor, a 22 year old, Army Brat from Virginia has got a lot to say about walking in someone else’s shoes.
Although Preston identifies as a male, he’ll allow you to call him what you like. As an easy-going Virgo he likes to make everyone feel comfortable and keep the mood light; after all, there’s no reason to fuss about trivial things.
Prior to the photo-shoot, I interviewed Mr. Taylor while he put on his minimal make-up.
Q: So how do you feel about gracing the cover of Feral for a second time?
A: Oh, I’m ecstatic! I feel really honored and excited to have this opportunity. Not only to finally get a chance to really represent myself but also to represent you and your magazine as well. Recently in the modeling industry there has been some controversy over androgynous models, moreso in America and I’d definitely like to help set the record straight. Living androgynously myself I’d really like people to understand what it’s like first-hand.
Q: You said you live androgynously; can you elaborate on that a bit more?
A: Well, to begin with, I identify as a male but I’m not opposed to identifying as a female. There shouldn’t be anything wrong with being compared to a female, ever. To degrade me or any male that looks or acts “feminine” is misogyny and shouldn’t be tolerated. For a long time it’s been socially acceptable for women to be more “masculine” but it’s never been okay for a man to be “effeminate.” It’s one of the biggest hypocrisies of our society.
Q: So do you believe intolerance to be an issue in this country?
A: Yes, of course. What people need to understand, follow, and do is treat each other with respect. Nobody knows how to do that anymore and it’s quite disturbing to me.
If you give people the option to be who they are and to be honest with themselves don’t subject them to cruelty, don’t alienate them, don’t ostricize them, don’t put them down because of it, don’t hold any negative moral judgment about them.
We’ve grown up in a society where we’re told grow up to be who you wanna be, do what you wanna do. But when you reach that age to make the decisions to do the things that make you happy and define yourself society tells you “no you can’t do that, there’s no room for you here, be who you are on your own time.” There’s no room for you in this life to be who you want to be. You’re always forfeiting some part of yourself for the crowd. To be an individual in this life is difficult because when you are you’re pummeled down, you’re at the mercy of everyone around you and no one wants to have anything to do with you because “you’re not conforming,” “you’re breaking the rules” but that’s what you were told to do.
Whether I go out wearing make-up or not, I still have people mistake me for a woman and let me tell you, its not always flattering. Personally, I don’t have an issue with it, there’s nothing wrong with being beautiful and appreciated or celebrated for your gender or looks; but there’s also a vulnerability there that I shouldn’t feel as a person. The fear that someone may actually mistake me for a woman and try to do something to me then, upon finding me out to be a man, do something even worse is horrendous and completely unfair. I’ve had security called on me simply for using the men’s bathroom. What do you do? I shouldn’t have to worry about whether or not I should use the men’s bathroom or the women’s bathroom.
I can’t tell you how many jobs I’ve turned down simply because during the interview process they tell me I’m required to cut my hair short if I intend to work there. I understand there are levels of professionalism that need to be upheld in a workplace and dress codes that need to be followed but employers shouldn’t be allowed to have double standards.
Q: I think that’s something almost everyone can relate to at times, discrimination in the work place. Let’s get a little more background on you Mr. Taylor. You were born in Virginia, moved all over but made it back to Virginia is that correct?
A: Yeah, I was born in Virginia but I’ve lived in Germany, Korea, Alaska, Hawaii, Virginia, New York, and Michigan.
Q: And generally how accepting of your lifestyle were those places? How long have you been living androgynously?
A: Well, I’ve been living androgynously since I was about fourteen, so almost ten years of my life now. As far as my environments accepting my lifestyle I’d have to say it’s been pretty rocky. I was in Germany and Korea at a young age so the experiences there were moreso just childhood experiences rather than actual dealings with a genderless persona.
Virginia would be where it started. I was a goth kid as a pre-teen and into my teenage years. The gothic lifestyle has always been big with androgyny to begin with so that wasn’t really an issue. Aside from that I kept my hair as long as my parents would allow, rocking a Natalie Portman-esque bob-like bowl cut [it was the 90’s.] Riding the bus was a fucking nightmare though. Kids are horrible. Of course I was going through puberty and having already been different from other boys to begin with in my life it didn’t help when I started to develop a small but literal breast.
Q: Wait, so you have a boob?
A: Yup, I have a boob, just one haha. The rest of me is all male though. I’ve got a pretty good attitude about things so when it showed up I guess I just decided to roll with the punches. I didn’t hate myself for it, I just joked about it and moved on. It’s obviously probably played a part in my identity ‘issues’ over the years though, so to speak. After a few years we left Virginia and moved to Hawaii. I didn’t really like it there to begin with and then soon after moving I decided to come out to my parents. I identify as bisexual but when I dropped the bomb on my parents that I did, in fact, like the same sex my short-lived stint on the island of Oahu ended and I came to my parent’s hometown of Millington to live with my grandparents.
Q: Your parents didn’t take it well, I presume? How old were you then?
A: Sixteen and no they didn’t at first but we’ve come to an understanding. My parents, like anyone’s, only want what’s best for me. So, I moved out for some much needed space. I flew across an ocean, plus ¾ of a continent, and landed myself in the middle of the Michigan sticks. Because of my Brat status I had to be held back a few years, as my credits don’t always transfer and ended up a sophomore instead of the Junior I was supposed to be.
Q: So, moving around a lot, that obviously had implications on your educational records, what about socially? It must not have been easy making friends when you were moving so frequently.
A: For sure! I definitely got sick of the moving at some points. When you move a lot and you never know when it’s going to be, making friends isn’t really your first priority so I kind of had to become accustomed to being alone Plus, moving gave me opportunities to see a lot but having never really felt at “home” in any place I figured I’d have to make home my own skin. Being comfortable with yourself is something we all have to come to terms with but I feel like I got to know myself earlier on than most.
Millington has definitely played a significant role in contributing to my thick skin. My first day of school I ended up, literally, trapped in a stairwell with the entirety of the B Lunch pushing and shoving to get a look at me. The teachers couldn’t even get control of the students; it was total bullshit. That’s pretty much how my reputation began to precede me. Since I’d already dealt with the usual school bullying in my previous academic settings this all seemed a bit dramatic but nothing I couldn’t handle. I had people threatening me daily and subsequently I had to take a secluded route home from school to avoid any potential fights. By the time I finished school everyone and their siblings knew who I was. Whether they had anything good to say or bad to say was entirely about whom you spoke to and who was around them when you asked. I definitely got a lot of undeserved attention but I managed to make friends too.
Q: But the entirety of the negative attention was simply because you look like both a boy and a girl?
A: Yup.
I, honestly, didn’t even participate in gym class because I couldn’t change in the locker room without being harassed. I had long hair and wore eyeliner. That’s it. I still wore pants to school, I still wore t-shirts; I wasn’t promenading around in some fucking platforms or wearing dresses but that’s what they acted like. Even if I were, the way those people treated me and some of the other people I went to school with was entirely unnecessary.
I don’t ask for a lot in this life. Sure I wanna wear make-up and keep my hair long, and yeah my clothes don’t always match but those are my choices and I like to keep things fresh, I like to be different, and I feel I keep it at a happy medium. It’s important to have both ‘masculine’ and ‘feminine’ qualities as a person and our culture differentiates the sexes and defines gender roles at such an early age that it kind of indoctrinates people to define what they should and shouldn’t do. Obviously, in order to further our species we need to need to keep some sort of roles as male and female where sexual intercourse is involved but other than that, in mannerisms or dress, there shouldn’t be any issue.
Q: So, now that we know a little more about you, let’s talk about your life behind the camera. How did that all start?
A: My mother was an avid photographer. I owe her for a lot of the skills I have today. She was always trying to capture that perfect image. That moment, because of that I’ve had a lot of discipline with my body, self-awareness, posturing, etc. My mother would always try and photograph my younger sister but she was never nearly as cooperative as I was. As time went on I found my time behind the camera to be therapeutic and started using it as a means of expression. I’d been musically inclined from a young age but found a different way to express myself through modeling that only grew through the years. I became the muse of a friend in high school who was constantly using me for projects and random photo shoots to build his portfolio.
Q: Well, we actually spoke with Ben about you after the shoot and he had some pretty good things to say:
“Preston is beyond a doubt one of the most talented models I’ve ever had the pleasure of working with. He’s got guts and vision. He takes direction beautifully, models with his entire body, and really puts himself out there. He’s just as adamant about getting ‘the shot’ as me, if not more sometimes. He definitely has a gift for expression and he is totally fearless in his pursuit.”
With that being said, could you describe your modeling style to us? What inspires you, as a model?
A: Modeling isn’t just taking pictures, and it isn’t just looking pretty for the camera. Modeling is a contribution to being able to capture a beautiful moment that lasts a lifetime.
Q: It sounds like you have a pretty nostalgic view of photography.
A: A picture is worth a thousand words and the simplest phrase can have a thousand meanings. The Mona Lisa. It’s only a painting, but what makes it so prolific is the moment Leonardo captured when he decided to paint it. That coy smile is something that has haunted the art world for years.
Q: Certainly iconography and eternal life have been the pursuit of humans for thousands of years, what exactly do you think that divine spark is? What is it that makes a photograph last a lifetime?
A: You need to bring life to a picture. We have a picture of my sister in a field of flowers, and even though she’s angry and making a face, that picture is priceless because of it. The fire in my sister’s eyes, all because she didn’t want her picture taken, that passion and raw emotion made that photo.
Q: Now that we’ve gotten your take on photography, what do you think of the modeling industry?
A: The industry, as a whole, is just that, an industry. What you do on an individual level is entirely up to you. What you want to represent, who you want to be. What do you want to say? I can’t speak from any experience on a professional level, so I’ve no idea the challenges contracted models face but there’s certain sacrifices that must be made in order to maintain any career.
Q: There certainly are a lot of qualifications to sign with any modeling company, with height and weight and such. I find it funny how they all want men and women both to be super skinny. What do you have to say about that?
A: It’s stupid. They make gender-oriented clothing with the idea that our bodies are different therefore we should be wearing separate attire. That makes sense but when it comes to the modeling industry taking only the skinniest of both men and women it’s ridiculous. When we become too skinny or too fat our bodies just end up looking the same. Sure not all modeling companies want only impossibly skinny people but a majority of them, it seems, do.
Q: Obviously the modeling industry has played a huge role in shaping body-image in our society, can you tell us your thoughts on the subject?
A: Being a male, and aspiring model, I’ve noticed that my height is a crucial advantage, however I’ve never wanted to look as chiseled as most of the models I see in American ads and it seems like that’s been the trend for a number of years. There’s a lot of resentment toward men who aren’t ‘masculine enough’ so, in ways, there’s a lot of misandry in our society too.
At times it has discouraged me a bit and I know that if it’s made me feel bad about myself then I can only imagine what kind of effect it’s had on other people’s image of themselves. Not only does it make men feel pressured to ‘work out’ to prove their masculinity, but it also puts ideas and false expectations into women’s heads too.
Q: I feel the same way. I was at an event once and I was wearing a pair of high heels and at one point during the evening a man approached me and confided that he wished he could wear shoes like mine and not be considered to be effeminate or assumed to be homosexual. It had never occurred to me that a straight man actually might want to wear high heels, and really can’t without the fear of emasculation from both other men and women alike. The best and saddest part is he was one of a few heterosexual males who complimented my attire that evening.
A: People really need to get over this ‘cross-dressing complex’ they seem to have. They’re shoes. David Bowie did it, Prince, Kiss, need I go on? Those are prime examples of men who have worn heels and still had relationships with women. In my personal opinion a woman should be able to give a man props for walking around in ‘her’ shoes.
Q: Exactly, well said. Now, to conclude our interview, are there any closing words you have for everyone?
I realize I’m judged mostly based on stereotypes and so is everyone else but I strictly reserve the right to represent what I can, which is myself and the things I stand for. So, I’d like to say I do view myself as an advocate and poster child for the LGBT community. As a model and as a person I want to prove and represent that there are indeed good people who live a different lifestyle. I want to show people we’re not freaks and we’re not dangerous. I’d like to be seen as a role model or a mentor and to inspire people the way I was inspired by androgynous model Andre Pejic. I want to help be the face of change.
----------
To read more on this subject check out this informative article by Van Burnham!
http://www.modelmayhem.com/education/modeling/5625-androgynous-modeling
To see more androgynous models visit:
http://www.buzzfeed.com/saeedjones/8-stunningly-beautiful-androgynous-models
http://www.thecrosbypress.com/2013/03/19/get-weird-with-fashions-11-most-androgynous-models-the-run-down/#
www.broken-arrows-clothing.tumblr.com
Alright, Ms. Baxter, give us a little background on yourself.
I am 20 years old. I’m from Flint, born and raised, lived in the same house my whole life. Attended central high school an graduated from Mott middle high school. I’ve been doing art since I was about 8. I think what got me started with art was, literally, boredom. My neighborhood didn’t have other kids to play with so I just started drawing things out of coloring books. Growing up I met this girl named Jelissa Skinner who drew also and we just kind of had a little friendly competition through drawing and I think that’s what kept me going with it; companionship.
Awesome, let’s jump right in, I was interested in one of your more recent pieces depicting a family where the parents heads are a television and a computer screen, tell us about that.
That drawing was about how I feel that the media, as far as the internet and the television, raises our kids more than the parents do. I mean, I learned about sex from the T.V. before I learned about it from my mom or sex ed. Definitely in music, ‘cause y’know when you’re young and you hear the slow jams or the local r&b or rap stations that’s all they really talk about is sex and you figure it out eventually.
So do you feel that the negative affects of mainstream media on society are intentional?
Oh, Absolutely! I believe there’s a lot of good intention with positive affects but also a lot of bad intention. Especially toward body image and I think it comes mostly from the need to sell people things. Keeping the economy running smoothly, in their eyes.
This picture with the pill bottle everyone’s waiting outside of, what’s going on here? Is it safe to assume you feel similarly about prescription medications as you do the media?
Yeah, the medical profession, obviously, isn’t exempt from condoning the use of prescription medications, they’re peddling them, but the music industry also pushes their use quite heavily. The painting ‘People Live Here’ was so-called because some people do center their lives around their addictions to oxycontin, xanax, etc.
Would you say art is your anti-drug, your bread and butter, purely therapeutic? What do you want to say with your art?
It’s therapeutic; I feel that I express things I view as important to me through my artwork because I feel that I can get my point across better that way by showing someone visually and then helping to explain it. Most of my artwork, if I post it online or when showing it, has a small explanation below it or beside it just to further explain the need to create it and what exactly its saying. I see my art as a platform to get what I have to say out because I feel like if I were to say it they’d be less apt to listen to me. So with my art people see it and then they ask about it.
Let me ask you about the painting with all the guns and the African woman.
That painting was inspired by a conversation I had with a friend about the rape epidemic in Africa. I mean, it’s been like that for years over there, the victims are men and women alike. Statistics show the problem is getting worse too because of wars over there and things. It’s just something that made me feel really sad that it happens and it’s odd to me how we, as a culture, as a society, can ignore it so much really. I feel like as Americans we’re in a little bubble and we don’t really see or know what’s going on in the rest of the world and I guess some people don’t really care, but I think we should. Like, I’m not entirely sure what we can do about it as a country because I don’t feel that our military should just go poke our nose in their business but I think its important for us to know what’s going on. We seem to pick up on things if they’re considered really big but I guess I feel that society kind of, doesn’t ignore, but undermines or normalizes rape.
So you think that we, as Americans, are somewhat blissfully ignorant to what else is going on in other countries and we’re okay with rape. How do you think that affects us? What do you think is perpetuating this idea of rape being “something that happens” because I’ve been seeing a lot of things on blogs I follow that use the terminology ‘rape culture’ to describe our society. I’ve done a little bit of research on the subject, what are you feelings?
I believe it’s definitely engrained in our culture especially through, I hate to say it, but through rap. I don’t want to hate on rap because there is good rap, r&b, and hip-hop it’s not all bad but there are specific elements, and themes in a majority of popular and mainstream rap that just shouldn’t be. Music is a very powerful tool and it has this control over people take, for example, the song ‘Air Force One’ by Nelly; after that song came out Air Force One shoe sales skyrocketed out of this world and had he not made that song those shoes might not have gained that much popularity but the fact still remains that he did and you see the evidence of the shoe sales. As I said before I do have an appreciation for rap and r&b I just don’t like what I guess you could classify as “rape culture rap” because they rap about things you just shouldn’t touch. We were talking about this in my communications class and we touched on how Lil’ Wayne had said “beat it up like Emmett till” and of course he’s talking about y’know having sex with a woman so hard that he’s comparing it to Emmett till being beaten to death for whistling at a white woman and it’s so disrespectful in so many ways. First of all, Emmett till’s family heard that and its apathetic to what happened and disrespectful to his own culture. Aside from that he has people that follow him and basically they’re like, “well if he did it it’s okay for me to” or “if he acts like that it’s alright for me to” and it just perpetuates all of it. The subject matter of so much of most of that music is “ho’s” and having different women every night and I think that has a huge impact on our sexual health as a community. I’m not saying it’s not okay to have sex or anything but I feel that we have music about healthy loving relationships and promote positive love and they’re just not as popular and I’m just confused as to why people choose to fill themselves with all that other stuff. I like music that tells a story or people that talk about things.
[Sidenote: Upon doing some research I found an article in which Emmett Till’s cousin speaks about the family’s feelings on the particular subject.
READ THE ARTICLE HERE! http://www.hiphopdx.com/m/index.php?s=news&id=22912 )
I’m gathering that you feel, in today’s society, that we objectify ourselves a lot. The painting entitled ‘We Were Once Gods’ depicts a solemn looking woman with bees flying around the background, does that have some significance to our lack of self-respect?
Although I do believe society almost equally objectifies both sexes [possibly for different reasons but with similar results] but that piece, in particular, is based on the idea that women used to be worshipped or, at least, held at a higher respect during Egyptian times. I put bees in the picture because bees represent a feminist view. In their colonies females run everything and the males are just made to mate with the queen.
Well said, Ms. Baxter. So, from what you’ve been telling me, having looked at your own artwork, and now hearing that you like music that tells a story is it safe to say your thought-processes and basis of your work is entirely illustrative.
Yes I love illustrating life, emotions, poems, songs. That’s why I like working with working with watercolor. I don’t like monotone or grey scale really. The color is really what sets the mood and tone for everything. Plus, as I said before, I like to explain my artwork to people and everything behind it.
And one last question for you, would you say you have an extreme attachment to your artwork? Is it difficult to sell?
I definitely have an attachment to my art and it’s very hard to part with, but I really would like to sell it so I can get it out there.
Contact her about purchasing her artwork!
https://www.facebook.com/shotgunshellz?fref=ts
Mr. Solis, tell me about yourself.
Age? Where were you born? Where did you grow up? Where do you currently reside?
I'm currently 26. I was born in Fairfax, Virginia. While my father worked with politicians, my mom put life on hold for a bit to raise me. We moved to Flint, Mi when I was still very young, within the first two years of my life and that's where I'm currently living. When did you start singing? When did you learn to play guitar? What inspires your work? Who or what influences it? I don't remember when I started singing. I'd say when I was young. I remember using my father's hand held tape recorder to record songs, sounds, even my own voice just to hear what it sounded like from a different perspective. I never intended to be a singer, I actually enjoy writing. Words are powerful. I ended up singing in one of my first bands because I had to, haha. We had a gig and every singer we tried out didn't make the cut so I filled in and eventually did lead vocals. Singing and performing became a way for me to reach out to people with words that I wouldn't have been able to do otherwise. As far as guitar playing goes, I actually didn't start until I was almost into my twenties. I played bass for years and that was the instrument that got me into playing live music. It wasn't until I started arranging songs on my own that I gave guitar playing a serious go. As far as what inspires me: people. As a whole. There's nothing more absurd that everyday life. I understand you’re also the lead singer for the band 1876. Would you care to elaborate on that subject? 1876 was a band I was a part of in 2007. We intended on making that band our priority but personal struggles and changes among all of the members sent us on our separate ways. After a few years we realized that the project still was our priority as a group of musicians and friends, we just needed to grow individually first. We had been playing music for years together in assorted projects and I think we all just needed to go through some growing pains separately before we could focus together on what we all wanted anyways and that is to make music that really grabs people. Shake them up a little bit. Make them think. Make them not feel alone in whatever mood they're going through. It's very different stylistically than what I do on my own. This definitely has a more rambunctious sound to it, rock n roll. It's actually become my main project and everything I can muster out of myself on a creative level is poured into 1876. We'll be setting a release date for our newest EP soon!
WWW.BROKEN-ARROWS-CLOTHING.TUMBLR.COM
$15 'WILD ORCHID' FRINGE
Let's start by getting to know Ryan Gregory a little bit before we dive into the musical aspect of everything shall we?
*-Age?
I’m 26 years old, born on Halloween in 1986.
*-Where did you grow up?
I grew up in Clio, Michigan. Just outside of Flint Vehicle City.
*-Where do you live now?
I officially moved to Flint when I was 20, although, I had been an active member of the the Flint music and art scene since high school. I currently live in the Mott Park area of Flint, Michigan.
*-I understand that you're an artist of all sorts.
Yes, I spend most of my time building found object constructions, altering musical instruments, and overall just experimenting with building projects from used and recycled parts.
*-What kind of artwork do you make?
I dabble in many different mediums; I’ve worked mostly on shadowbox constructions and 'found-object' lamps for gallery shows. I have a history of modifying instruments and gear mechanically and electronically, and sometimes just building original ideas completely from scratch. My artwork style pulls from a few main places; the love of all things mysterious and eerie / reusing old parts of broken objects / and mechanical design.
I’ve been a tinkerer and a thinker since the age I could hold a screw driver and continue today.
*-What drives you most to create this way?
I see the things around me; decomposing buildings and wastefulness of our own and previous generations. Bad product designs made for short lifespans, it’s overwhelming. It’s at a tipping point, things build up, trash. Things deemed too efficient to continue production to keep profits high, piles of old tv Sets, computer screens, out of date windows, old furniture and personal belongings just scattered or in illegal dump sites around the city. These things can only be hidden for so long. Just pushed aside to be forgotten until there is no place left to push them aside. Yet still our resources continue into the future on this destructive path, simultaneously becoming more and more expensive, feeding gigantic corporations until the day they are tapped dry.
Although I’m working on a very small scale, tiny, maybe microscopic in relation to the bigger picture. I am using trash as a resource. I feel that is the ultimate message. As far as the topic of creating moods and ideas specific to each piece of art. I like to find personal belongings, old photos, or objects that give me a feeling or trigger a memory. I take these things and build shrines to them, small worlds with parts you can imagine moving and the way they sound.
*-Where does the music come in?
Well, going back to being a tinkerer. Taking everything apart and trying to rewire things to see what would happen…I started dissecting allot of radios and speakers and any toys I had that made sounds as a kid and never stopped. I guess that could be the start in my attraction to making sounds and eventually music. As for getting into playing instruments, I had a grandpa that lived with my family and always had a guitar he played some classic old tunes on. Also, one of my neighbors had a recording studio set up in a garage that I lurked around growing up and into my teenage years. Sometime between 8th grade and high school I got my first actual guitar, just like, a few of my friends and I; we started to learn with and teach each other.
Instantly I exploded with interest in making music with anything I could find. I have collected and built instruments ever since, learning more each day. My first guitar amp was made from a stereo receiver and some crappy old speakers. I still like the way those sound. I remember once I took the rechargeable battery pack from my remote control car and wired it to a computer speaker amp with a car stereo speaker then hot glued it all into a small suitcase with an instrument cable so I could have a rechargeable mini guitar amp to take with me anywhere. I LOVED THAT THING!
Anyhow, as far as getting into some underground music, I remember sometime around getting my first guitar the studio I lived by shutdown and I was given boxes of tapes, records, and cd’s from their listening room. This lead me into lots of experimental musical artist like Sonic Youth, the Violent Femmes, and The Pixies to name a few. Just to clarify, there was also allot of 80’s hair metal and for some reason a TLC album. (Not going to lie I listened to all of them.) I tried to learn how to play songs I liked and figure out ways to create/imitate the sounds they made, I’m still trying.
*-How did you come about making music, structurally?
Eventually through friends making noises together I guess you just kind of figure things out. I started repeating patterns and writing out diagrams to remember how I made the chords and how many times to play what. In the early days, I recorded on stereo tape decks rigged together so I could record multiple tracks and play guitar riffs over each other. Just through word of mouth and finding friends that also had guitars and bands of their own, along with an older sister, I was introduced into the punk scene and I eventually found myself at the Local 432. With it being an all age’s music venue in Flint I was quickly making new friends and playing in small short-lived projects all around the area... I felt like I belonged with these other kids, like I was in the wrong school like there should have been a school that all the new music and art kids I met all went to. We had our after-school program every weekend we couldn’t wait for, The Local 432, and basement shows, and Tom Z’s Coney Island. Super strong friendships grew and continued into more refined bands and future projects that are still in progress.
*-Lyrically, is there specific subject matter you're drawn to?
Yeah, a couple ones I tend to always lead into, mostly frustrations. Sometimes around friendships and adventures from childhood but for whatever reason my lyrics seem to come out dragging a sense of hatred for the way things are with the modern mindset.I see a generation of people programmed to think that they can’t make a difference in their community. That what the Government tells us to do is right and not caring about things is cool, and people with passions are a joke. It’s all global government brain washing. They want to raise a generation that is blind to human rights and pollution or at least one that doesn’t care about it. It just helps them ease their way into your wallet while at the same time creating whatever products make the biggest buck no matter what the cost to our planet. Designed by the big money for the the big money. They want a generation that grows up never thinking they have a say in the way things work and to never question it. Its reallllly fucking awful.
*- What musical artists would you say have influenced your own sound, if any at all? Any authors, poets, painters?
Well, this answer could get massive so for sake of time and space, here is a short very stripped down list.
Sonic Youth, Red Red Meat, Built to Spill, Tom Waits, Broken Social Scene, John Cage, Califone, Modest Mouse, Pavement, Hot Snakes, The Pixes, The Violent Femmes, Antony and the Johnsons, Spoon, The Weakerthans, Neil Young
*-What do you want to say with your music and where would you like it to go?
I guess I bounce around with what I’m projecting. Sometimes I feel more compelled to send out frustrations and visions of change in myself and others for the future. Other less lyrical times I try to create set sounds for feelings or places tied in with D.I.Y. light shows. Or even assemble entire costume driven theme side projects (aka “Mister Creepy” Halloween Show). Sometimes I’m just having fun trying to create as complex, interesting, and driving a sound I can live as one person challenging myself and giving a visual experience.
Where I would like to go with it all is to just be able financially to continue. And to continue growing more D.I.Y. interest in other people. I want to travel in a van to new places, meeting awesome people that do awesome things, making memories building friendships all along the way hopefully leaving inspiration for people to take control of their direction. Get More People to experiment and make things happen that support free thinking without concerns of others judgments.
Hear more Ryan Gregory @
http://mistercreepy.bandcamp.com/
http://morsevillebridge.bandcamp.com/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g7heKAp6nZQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ek6GgLJopbo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U1ZiwXfB6rE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzNYIQOR01I
http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&feature=endscreen&v=tpSKpzUGL6Y
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J8ThvdNM_z4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkrSNw1j_rU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4SY--FjecR0
Contact
Email: [email protected]
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ryan.gregory.756?ref=tn_tnmn
Instagram: misterryangregory
Fernando Solis - Something Good
GET A SNEAK PEEK AT - SHERRIE LEIGH BROWN
Find out how she got the nickname "Downtown Sherrie Brown" ;D
NEXT ISSUE
See more from Ryan Gregory below
vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv
-UP NEXT-
INTERVIEW - COMIN SOON
Q: What is Broken Arrows?
A: We are a utopian-minded clothing company focused on the reduction of both waste and mass consumption of resources. This is made possible by using recycled and salvaged materials that are, literally, at our disposal. By doing this we intend to create a brighter and less polluted future for the generations to come.
Q: Where did this idea come from?
A: Well, most of my jobs had been in retail or customer service and I really enjoyed the interaction with people and building rapport with customers but there were times when I got sick of the superficiality. I found the system to be extremely unrewarding and I didn’t see any good in trying to trick people into spending money they didn’t need to or sometimes didn’t even have and I didn’t feel right about any of it. I couldn’t really see a way out of it either, I’d never wanted to view myself as prosaic but there I was, 23, living the dream as a cashier/salesman. After working for a certain thrift store I was shocked when I found out that most of the clothing that wasn’t purchased was just eventually thrown out and left in a landfill to rot. It got me thinking about waste and all the documentaries I’d seen about garbage, y’know, how it affects the planet too.
Our family had always recycled and I knew that it was a good thing, however, I still felt I wasn’t living as closely with the earth as I could or wanted to; I still don’t. With the constant cry of global warming and my own observations and experiences in climate change just in the short period of my own life I was constantly mulling everything over. Then I lost my job and had some time on my hands, I’d wanted to learn how to sew and do things for myself so I just started making things. It wasn’t really until I had called my friend Hunter and spoken to her about what I’d been doing that, the idea really took off. She had been sewing, I’d been sewing and strangely enough we both had the same idea, simultaneously yet separately.
We’re kind of the same person anyway: peaceful/bohemian/dreamers.
We discussed how we felt about consumerism and the way society is; we weighed the pros and cons of everything and what we could do to change things. The idea of broken arrows harming none felt like a path I wanted to take. That whole, ‘be the change’ saying finally clicked y’know?
Q: So in other words you want to live more organically and more harmoniously with the planet as a whole?
A: Yeah, I believe it’s the right thing to do. I’ve always liked helping people and making people happy. So after a career awareness class I took in college I understood that service positions really were my calling but the aforementioned occupations left me craving sense of purpose and independence. I wanted to employ a sense of progression and a go-getter attitude in my life. I started sewing in order to improve my general skill-set.
A growing number of people, have been delving pretty heavily into the whole DIY [do-it-yourself] scene and I think that good ole’ American Rosie-the-riveter can-do spirit really has been what has fueled this new renaissance. The idea that I didn’t know how to do basically anything for myself kick-started me into high gear and gave me the ambition to get out from under oppression’s thumb. I mean, I knew how to cook, clean, do my own laundry, change my own oil, change a tire, change the brake-pads. Those were things my parents, friends, and experience had taught me. I’d always turned to books and researched the answers to any question I might have before even asking anyone, so it only made sense that I could put those skills to good use and expand my DIY repertoire. I mean that’s being an adult right? Knowing how to do things for yourself? I’d like to think that if society fell apart I could still go on, if I had no one, I’d at least know how to take care of myself y’know? We want to instill that same pride in our clothing. So you can expect us to be making our own organic dyes and such in the future. I’m excited.
Q: So, the cover, what inspired that photo?
http://feralmagazine.tumblr.com/post/46618585332
A: It was actually from a series of photos meant for another project I ended up scrapping but I liked them so I kept them. As I started brainstorming other projects I ended up finding the photos to be quite representative of other things I was feeling. I found unintentional/subliminal symbolism that I hadn’t noticed before.
Today’s society, I feel, is draped in ancient symbolism and ideals. We are driven by instinct and the most basic of needs but deprived of true sight. We celebrate Pagan holidays slathered with Christian overtones and most people don’t really know why we have the customs we do on holidays, now its just commercialized fodder to slyly persuade us into annual purchases we otherwise wouldn’t make. We are hearing the distant cries of our spiritual identities but the constant barrage of technology disarms us. Our generation has been exposed to anachronistic agricultural techniques. We still plant our crops in the ground the way the ancients did however, they’ve added the futuristic process of changing the molecular structure of our crops in a futile attempt at forcing our species to “evolve positively.” Instead, they’re inevitably creating more disease in order to further a failing system and perpetuate the lie that money is essential to life.
We still manage, somehow, to feel the warmth of the sun on our flesh, keeping us grounded to our earth mother, an unbreakable, but now foreign language between beings that actually do share the same DNA. We wander listlessly through life searching for the answers that are right in front of us, beneath our feet, beneath the pavement; they grow up through the cracks. We try to find them in others or in idle technologically infused tasks to pass time and both intentionally and unintentionally wash out our critical thought processes. Some of the greatest minds we have built our school’s curriculums on have all suggested looking deep into nature to find all the answers we need.
The leaders of today lack this type of introspection. They are repeating history by ignoring the past and painting a false picture, all to gain control of a quickly crumbling society. John Lennon probably said it best,
“Our society is run by insane people for insane objectives. I think we’re being run by maniacs for maniacal ends and I think I’m liable to be put away as insane for expressing that. That’s what’s insane about it.”
- John Lennon
Q: So, do you still have hope for the future then? Will people start living more closely with the earth, do you think?
A: Oh, absolutely! It’s hard sometimes, but yeah, I do. I have a lot of hope for the future, its like what Scott Mckenzie said in his song ‘San Francisco’
“All across the nation such a strange vibration, people in motion. There’s a whole generation, with a new explanation, people in motion, people in motion.”
We are those children. We are that generation. We are the future. It’s time to take away the blindfolds. Break down all the walls. Create more imaginative and unique ways to better ourselves not just personally, but familiarly, communally, and globally. Not just for today and not to make up for yesterday but for posterity. We need to take control of our own lives and stop living the way we’re told. Stop chasing someone else’s dreams and start living our own.
www.broken-arrows-clothing.tumblr.com