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Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Thursday, May 29, 2014

American Expat Finds Artistic Challenge in Berlin

As part of my class requirements for this photojournalism course here in Berlin, I am required to find a Berliner and profile them. We want to learn where they came from, what they do, what makes Berlin special in their eyes. We follow them around for a bit to collect photos, interview them, and make a Soundslide project. Eventually, those Soundslides will appear on a website and our work also appears in a published book that our professor puts together.

I've mentioned Pascal to you before. Pascal is my subject. I met Pascal when our group visited Dr. Pongs, a sort of simplistic, underground bar that has a ping pong table. Pascal bar tends part time at Pongs. We hung out a couple different times, sampled cappacinos and espressos together from a variety of cafes around Berlin. He also took me to his studio where I got to see a sampling of his work. Here's my little narrative on him. Soon, I'll post the Soundslide version as well:



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By day, American expatriate Pascal Folly paints, teaches English, takes walks, drinks coffee at his favorite cafes and volunteers with the homeless. By night, he bar tends, dances, parties and enjoys the vibrant techno-infused nightlife of Berlin. After living abroad in Brazil and Japan, Folly returned home to Washington, D.C. where he and his artwork felt stagnant. 



“I had no lady, no sword, no shield and no quest,” said Folly. After hearing many positive things about the city, Folly decided to just pick up and go. He ventured to Berlin in 2012 for the first time to challenge himself and his artistic approach in a brand new environment. He didn’t know anyone in Berlin and didn’t speak the language. For the first time, Folly felt failure. But he also experienced a city that was open and full of potential. Folly was newly inspired to develop his paintings in his shared studio space, experimenting with abstract circles and lines. He also admires the sense of community he found in the city. “In Berlin, people respect what you assign value to,” Folly said. “So, if you want to be an artist, you be one.”


Tuesday, May 27, 2014

What is Weiner Schnitzel? And Other Questions From a Non Meat-Eater


-->Those of you who know me well should have seen this post coming.
Today, I'll talk about one of my great loves in life.
Food.

A bratwurst and potato salad with a red (rot) Berliner Weiser.
I identify as a pescetarian, meaning I only eat fish and no meat, not even chicken or turkey.
Except for when I travel.
I've been eating a pescetarian diet since my senior year of high school, broken only by my trip last year to Argentina, where missing out on their beef is more sinful that breaking your self-imposed dietary restrictions.

So that's one of my flexibilities and something I encourage other people to do when they travel- sample the local cuisine! Something you are sure to find in Berlin are the typical "German" items like bratwurst. If you don't have a sensitive stomach or an aversion to street food, I recommend you at least try sampling a street vendors brat. They carry their grills on their front, the propane on their backs, and usually have an umbrella conveniently located over their heads so they are free to serve you hands free.

Aaaannnndddd Weiner Schnitzel.
 
You'll also find a variety of sausage usually served with potato salad on the side. Curry wurst is another anomaly. As our biking tour guide Sophie said, when the British got curry powder, they made tikka masala. When it reached the Germans, they mixed it with ketchup and put it on sausage.
And it's pretty good. For a sausage in ketchup that is.
And Weiner Schnitzel? It’s actually DELICIOUS. The other night as a group we visited a very traditional restaurant in Friedrichshagen where I sampled a pork schnitzel. It’s just a thin, breaded slice of meat, usually veal. But it is so good. 

 
What I didn't expect was how much Eastern food I would find. Aside from a variety of Thai food, which is slowly becoming my favorite, there is also a ton of Doner Kebab(p)s.
To be honest, I don't always know what's in them. But if you're here, get one. They usually have a lot of veggies packed into this great bread, reminiscent of nan bread for your Indian food fans. They include some sauces and meat, which is usually lamb, which is mounted in a round-ish shape, heated from one side, and slowly spun, cooking the meat. Someone comes and slices pieces away. The overall impression is actually magical. You’ll also find your felafel, humus, halloumi, and other typical assortments.


Berliner Pilsner. (A little too watery for my taste.)
Beverages:
I’ve recently become interested in beer production and how certain brewing techniques affect the taste and quality of beer. I’ve sampled a few here, and I make a point of trying something different when I can.
I’ve tried Warstiener, Berliner Weisse (rot/red), Berliner Pilsner and, my favorite, Hefeweizen which is a wheat beer. 
All in all, some of the best parts of these long, busy days are the meals and drinks shared with these lovely people; my friends.

Enjoying drinks and scenery at a beer garden in Wannsee.
Warsteiner beer in Wannsee beer garden.





Thursday, May 22, 2014

Berlin: Poor but Sexy

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Willkommen to Berlin!
This blog post is long overdue.
I'm supposed to be blogging while I'm here in Germany, as part of a Photojournalism study abroad trip I am doing with my college.
But each time I tried to sit down and write about this city and my ongoing experience in it, I got stuck.
I have found Berlin really challenging to describe. It truly is unlike any other major city I've been to, and it hasn't at all aligned with my expectations.
Shayla, me and Amanda stop for a selfie at the Wall.
You can follow Shayla's adventures here.

Not only do you have a Berlin that was once separated, now converged, but you have a Berlin that is constantly changing.

Professor Freeman, the photojournalism teacher leading our trip, says each year he comes, he seems buildings and stores come and go.

I'm liking the city so far though, I have to say.
I compared Berlin to someone who you "meet" for the first time on Facebook. You think you've got them figured out. Then you meet them in "real life" and the impression totally changes. You know at least one of those people, right? Yeah. That's Berlin.

We've done walking tours, biking tours, spent decent chunks of time on public transportation, and still this city was throwing me for a loop.
It wasn't until I separated from my group, and met up with my subject, Pascal, that I felt like I was getting to know Berlin on a more personal basis, from a different point of view.

While we're in the city, our project is to meet someone who lives in Berlin and do a profile on them. I ran into Pascal, an artist who bartends at Dr. Pongs and teaches English in his free time. I'll introduce you to him later.

For now, you can check out my photos here, and my album on Facebook.
Auf Wiedersehen!

A woman meditating near a memorial by the Berlin Wall.

A stop for ais or ice cream under a pretty
Berlin sky.

An example of "Old" Berlin and how some parts of the city
haven't changed in some time.

Prater Biergarten. You can order a beverage and complete
your meal with a bratwurst and potato salad.

Sunday, February 9, 2014

"I Like To Cut" and other ways to dance

photo by Spenser Dugal
Meet Jacqui.

I should include a brief disclaimer here; Jacqui is one of my best friends. In high school it was basically like this; if you knew me, you knew Jacqui.

But the fact that we've always been close hasn't blinded me to her talent, nor does it nullify my belief in her talent.

I'll give you an example.

Jacqui came to visit me several weeks ago, and proudly displayed her newly developed YouTube channel with a single video on it. It was of an assignment she had for dance class, a "text solo" in which she had to choreograph a dance while simultaneously speaking a monologue about a childhood memory.
Jacqui chose to do her solo based upon a time when she was five years old and cut all of her brother's hair off because "all her Barbies were bald."

Jacqui slipped on her first pair of ballet slippers at the wee age of three. I went to many of Jacqui's
Jacqui starting dancing when
she was 3 years old.
dance recitals over the years. I remember sleeping over her house during recital time; carving out a space to sleep among the costumes, makeup boxes and the seemingly never ending pairs of tights. 

I always knew she was a good dancer. But I didn't realize HOW good. After watching her text solo, I was beyond impressed with my best friend; with how she used voice, facial expressions, and movement to communicate a childhood memory.

I was really proud. And I know Jacqui was too, even if she's not the type to openly boast about how freakin' awesome it was.

Through middle and high school, Jacqui always danced. But as a student at a performing arts school, instead of pointe shoes, she carried around camera equipment. Storyboards in place of leotards. Excel spreadsheets stuffed into her backpack where you might have expected to find bobby pins. Jacqui majored in communications, specializing in film, graphic design, and was a vital member of our yearbook staff.

But moving onto college, despite her skill in all of these areas, she knew her passion lay in dance. Her decision to pursue it, however, wasn't without it's challenges. Jacqui feels there's a lot of misconception about dancers, especially that dancers aren't as smart as engineering or psychology majors. In reality, however, she claims that belief is far from the truth. She thinks many dancers have plenty of other interests and capabilities in other areas, but simply choose dance instead.

"I had many career path options to take out of high school. Business. Medical. I wanted to be in marketing for a while, then I wanted to be a forensic pathologist and go into criminology," she said. 
"I chose dance because I couldn't live without it. Dancers have so much awareness of their own body, mind, the world around them, cause and effect, professionalism, and understanding of the way people function on an anatomical level and a mental level. I feel like dance has taught me so many things about myself and this world that would have taken me decades to figure out by another medium."

She now attends the University of South Florida in Tampa where she majors in dance studies.
photo by leanna scachetti
 Right now, Jacqui is preparing to dance in two pieces in USF's spring dance concert; a contemporary pointe piece by faculty member Paula Nunez. She's also re-staging a professional piece called "Lucifer's Prance" by choreographer Robert Moses.
 "That piece was an amazing opportunity and crazy awesome experience to work with Robert Moses for a couple days," said Jacqui.

Jacqui will also be competing in the American College Dance Festival in March in Georgia. Judges there will then decide which dances will perform in the final gala, and which will continue to the national division. On top of all that, Jacqui is rehearsing for two student choreographed works to the Student Dance Production on campus. She also teaches dance at a local studio. On her own, she is working on projects for her choreography class, which, hearkening back to her high school days, is a way for Jacqui to incorporate two loves of hers; dance and film.
Jacqui displays an arabesque at the Empire
State Building in NYC.


"Dance on film is interesting too because you control what the audience sees and doesn't see based on the frame of the camera as well as the use of editing, which can enhance a work to a whole different dimension. I'm just starting to dive into that kind of work and I have a few ideas I want to play with on my spare time." 

After she dons the cap and gown, Jacqui wants to work her way up to join a contemporary ballet or modern company. She counts the Spellbound Contemporary Ballet in Italy, Celli Contemporary Ballet in Italy,  and Robert Moses Kin in California as among her dream companies.

But if it doesn't work like she's planned in the time she's planned it to, Jacqui has ideas of using her other skills to continue working in the dance field, just not on the stage.

"I have said that if auditioning for companies I like doesn't work out right away that I could intern with the company's business side, using those skills to get me in. Then I could take classes with the company, get to know them, and work my way in as a dancer."

Dancing isn't always a brisé. Jacqui points out that dance is about overcoming challenges and problem solving every day. For her, the biggest challenge is to keep pushing through, even in the times of frustration and exhaustion, both mentally and physically. But it's the pursuit of improvement that keeps her going.

"Having the sense that something is just working out beautifully, and feeling that step that I always struggle with work out perfectly for the first time is always an amazing feeling.

Jacqui (far left) poses while rehearsing a student
choreographed dance by Vanessa Vargas.
Despite being a versatile dancer with experience in ballet, tap, jazz, modern, and hip-hop, Jacqui doesn't think that's what sets her apart.

"I approach each class, rehearsal, and performance with a certain mindset that I've noticed lots of other dancers, and people, don't have. Positivity and an open mind are so important, especially when working with dance because negative thoughts bring you and the whole group down and an open mind leaves so much room for creativity," she said. "Leave the judgment at the door, enter with an open mind ready to learn, create and explore."

photo by leanna scachetti
She sums it up by saying it's not perfection she's seeking. Which would seem odd from someone whose career seems to be based upon the achievement of perfection (cue Black Swan.) But for Jacqui, being "perfect" isn't the end goal. 

"Perfect means I've reached the end. I always want to continue growing and learning, improving, and creating."


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This is their story.
What's yours?
Email stories.about.them@gmail.com with your story (or that of someone you know).
Stories About Them are stories about You.
Pass it on.



Sunday, February 3, 2013

This one's mine

This particular story started a little while back. About 19 years to be a little more precise. The story of someone who loves to tell stories. If you stick with me, you'll get to hear a lot of them. Stories about other people; their lives; their dreams; their work. This blog, yes- this one's theirs. But to start it off, you'll need the story of the storyteller. So this one's mine. 

 My mom has told me since I was young, over and over again "Leanna, if you want something badly enough, you can achieve it." I've been known to be very cautious and meditative in my decision making, but I can honestly say I have found the niche where I am no longer hesitant, and a place where I feel I can best use my personal talents and abilities to serve others.


I didn't always start off thinking I would want to do what I do now. Against the Texan backdrop in which I was raised, the elementary-school-aged me saw herself in a more rugged setting...as a cowgirl or farmer. But my aspirations eventually began to change and develop when I moved to Florida and was accepted into an arts middle and high school. There, I was able to find the skill set that began to form my ideas of my future role in the real world, and what kind of purpose my efforts would be put towards. I wanted to tell people about the world and about all the people in it. I loved feeling like I was working for something bigger than myself; how I was given the opportunity to serve the community I was a part of. As you can see, I wasted no time...



I started off reading the daily lunch menu and have since progressed to playing a role hosting and producing in my college's Integrated News Facility,
While I was a communications major, I realized that there was a way to make a living doing the things I loved doing. People fascinate me. I love to listen to them, and I love it when someone teaches me something. I like making each day unique, and collecting stories with me along the way.


My greatest aspiration is to become a well-respected journalist who has the ability to travel and report through all platforms. I hope to have a fulfilling career reporting and that eventually I will make a positive impact in this field and continue to enhance the storytelling medium.
I like to use photography to help capture some of those stories. 



So this blog here. This is for artists, dancers, dreamers, thinkers, tinkers, and all those in between. I want this to be a platform for them to share their work, their thoughts, and their dreams with you, so that one story may affect another in some positive way. After all "We are the music makers, And we are the dreamers of dreams." So stop in often, and experience their stories. Because if anything else isn't, this one's theirs.