Archive for the 'Camper Van Chuck' Category
Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

I’m excited to announce a new series of work, presented as a solo exhibition at Kellar Mahaney Gallery. All the images are from one day in the Grand Tetons. I previously wrote about that day here. Here’s the info:
Andy Chen: Snow Day
Opening reception Feb 5, 5-9pm
exhibit continues through Mar 6
Kellar Mahaney Gallery, Zionsville, IN
SNOW DAY
Snow Day is a series of photographs taken among the Grand Tetons in Wyoming on an afternoon’s walk to Taggart Lake. We were nineteen days into a two-month wilderness road trip in October of 2009 and these photos capture the season’s very first snow.
In the months prior, we converted a Chevy cargo van into a camper, outfitting it with a pop-up top, bed, stove, bathroom, backpacking gear and guitar. I brought along my camera and my wife Hannah (who was five months pregnant then) brought along a sense of adventure.
There isn’t anything much better than fresh snow to pique my curiosity of transitions, mystery and wonder. We had hiked for several days before in wearing, drizzling rain. We went to bed in anticipation and we woke up to a frosted landscape. It was a snow day.
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Friday, January 2nd, 2009

I grew up in an Asian household. When you enter an Asian home, you take off your shoes. I took this as a bit of a hassle and included it among the strange Asian habits of not wanting to use things. I have relatives that live with plastic coverings over their coffee tables, couches and carpets. Taking off your shoes seems like an obvious extension. I didn’t have to take off my shoes at my friend’s houses. Why did my parents have to be so finicky? What’s with this no shoes in the house policy? Is it just neurosis?
It wasn’t just shoes, I didn’t like taking off my coat either. I like coats. As the weather cooled in the fall, I’d look forward to rediscovering the winter coats that had spent their summer exile in the attic. Perhaps it was a metaphor for wanting to shield myself from the world, like the teens that walk around school wearing trench-coats all the time. I think I just liked the feeling of being wrapped up warm and cozy. I had a habit of keeping my coat on after entering a home. The hosts would encourage me with a smile and a wink, “Why don’t you take your coat off? Stay a while.” I didn’t feel like I was on my way somewhere, I just like my coat, OK? Leave me alone.
Maybe I didn’t really want to stay somewhere. That could be why I love backpacking – it’s a kind of way of leaving. Interesting then, that when backpacking, one of the great simple pleasures is stopping for a break. For short breaks, you rest just long enough to take off your heavy pack. However, if you’re fortunate to stay longer, you can unbind your feet. Taking off your boots is an experience worthy of being a holy ritual. It’s like the first bite of food after a fast. There are stages of relief and sighs of pleasure. Ahhh, as you set down the pack. Oh, yes… as you loosen the laces and feel the extra room to move your toes. The boots come off. And then comes the ultimate freedom. You peel off the tight, woolen, hiking socks and your feet leave the confines of moist constriction to meet the open air. And then, you breathe. With toes wiggling in the breeze, you linger and take in the glory of the surrounding nature. To experience this pleasure, you need to be committed to stop for awhile. After you shed the pack, shoes and socks, you won’t be in any hurry to put them back on. Sometimes, it’s nicer to stop when it’s not as easy to leave.
In many natural scenic places, the park service has seen fit to build nice paved roads right up to a dramatic viewpoints and landmarks. In Yosemite National Park, Hannah and I took a walk from the valley to Glacier Point, a location that provides a breathtaking view of the area. We hiked a trail up switchbacks that wind through intimate glimpses and spectacular vistas. After a few hours, we near the top. We’re short of breath and eager for the serenity of the Glacier Point view and arrive at… a parking lot. There are families spilling out of their cars, grumpy kids, people carrying dogs and wearing high healed shoes. Most of the visitors stay for five minutes, force their bored children to pose for a picture, and then hop back into their vehicles for the drive back down to the valley. That is the nature of nice roads and nearby parking lots. You aren’t ever far enough from your car to let it go. Why consider staying when it’s so easy to leave? It’s time to check this site off the list and move on to the next destination.
During our two month road trip, we had days that were mostly driving. All day, incredible landscapes would slide by like a picture show through the windows and I would sit there with a slow, gnawing frustration. I suppose just seeing such beauty is privilege enough, but I want more. I want to feel the rock and soil under my feet. To smell the pines and sages. I want to brush up against willows and hear the twinkling leaves of cottonwood trees. Just to see and pass by is not enough. Get me out of that metal prison with windows posing as televisions. I want to know the place with all of my senses and them some. To know what things are named and how they interact and the stories they’ve lived. To linger. Remaining in the car feels distant from the moment where I’m sitting on the rock near my backpack and without my shoes.
In Hebrew scriptures, there is a story where Moses is taking a walk and notices a bush on fire. He nears the bush to get a closer look and is greeted by God. God says, “Moses, take off your sandals. You are standing in a holy place”.
The road trip took us from Indiana to California and back. In California, we met up with my sister, Tai-sing. Upon entering her home, she asked if I would take off my shoes. Delighted, I obliged.
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Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

We had a wonderful Thanksgiving in California with my sister. After that, we drove south along the coast of Highway 1 and then back to the desert for a whirlwind tour: Grand Canyon, Oak Creek Canyon, Cococino National Forest, Petrified Forest, Canyon de Chelly and Frijoles Canyon.

From there we rumbled eastward towards home, driving through below zero weather and ice storms.
We got back home about an hour ago. Hmm… Interesting to come back to all your stuff after being away for two months. Throughout the trip, I’ve been taking pictures with a few different projects in mind. I’ll have lots of editing to do. I’m particularly looking forward to making some prints.
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Saturday, December 6th, 2008

Just before Thankgiving, we stayed a few days in Yosemite. Since then, I’ve been reading John Muir. From over a hundred years ago, he described nature in a way that resonates strongly with some of the pictures I take, particularly those from the Little Pieces project.
“When we contemplate the whole globe as one great dewdrop, striped and dotted with continents and islands, flying through space with other stars all singing and shining together as one, the whole universe appears as an infinite storm of beauty.”
On wilderness, Muir wrote:
“Thousands of tired, nerve-shaken, over civilized people are beginning to find out that going to the mountains is going home; that wildness is a necessity, and that mountain parks and reservations are useful not only as fountains of timber and irrigating rivers, but as fountains of life.”
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Monday, December 1st, 2008

Highway 191 continues south from the Grand Tetons in Wyoming to the desert canyons of southern Utah. The drive is beautiful and it’s good to be back in the desert. The Tetons may be breathtaking, but there’s a heightened anticipation as the landscape turns sandy and red. It feels like coming home.
This trip has been a gradual removal of the conveniences of urban life. From the house to the camper van, we went from several rooms of living space down to one room of fifty square feet. Compared to what I’m used to, I’m living simply. But, those fifty square feet are packed with running water, sink, toilet, bed, futon, stove, heater and electricity – more accomodations than most people living on this planet have. From the camper van to the trail, I have with me only what I can carry on my back: a pack, sleeping pad, sleeping bag, tent, water, some food and a stove. And, the heaviest single item: my camera. I have to plan carefully to only bring that much.
The transition to living out of a backpack takes some discipline. Water is rationed until the next spring can be found, and I can only stay out until I run out of food. The days are hot and the nights cold. I like to stretch out and roll around in my sleep, but the mummy style sleeping bag binds me in like a straightjacket. I suppose this is “roughing it”, but how rough can it be with my high tech, ultra light, weather shedding, water wicking gear?
I am well equipped, but while out in the wilderness, I leave much behind. There’s no internet, no phone, no social network. There’s no career, no mortgage. I’m not concerned about if anyone appreciates how I look or dress or what I own, or how clever I am. Who am I without these things? How can it be, that while in the desert, without these decorations of identity, I can feel so fully alive?

I’ve spent more nights in the desert than any other wilderness climate. Within the scarcity, there is a richness. The rugged twisted juniper trees. The ecstatic explosion of desert flowers. The towering rocks and the stillness. Its inhabitants scrounge for food and water, living close to death yet full of life. “…perhaps that is why life nowhere appears so brave, so bright, so full of oracle and miracle as in the desert”, says Edward Abbey. So much is taken away that what is left is precious. Every bit of it. I re-learn what it is to appreciate. What’s funny is, that I suspect the world outside of the desert is like this too – every bit precious.
What does all this have to do with photography? From what I experience, from who I am, is what I see, becomes the pictures I create. I love that desert.
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Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

You have the opportunity to stand at the rim of a desert canyon. Or, the shore of a mountain lake. The location could even be the yard around your home. You can also pick the type of light and weather. What would you choose? What kind of picture would you want to make? Would you like dramatic clouds during the stillness of the early morning light? Or, perhaps the golden light of sunset with a wide view of the landscape.
Now, think of your favorite stories. It could be a novel, a movie, or something you heard from your neighbor. What makes these stories connect with you? Do they contain humor, beauty, oppression, grieving, peace, confusion, disaster, sacrifice, healing? Probably.
My favorite stories seem to start with a nobody main character. The protagonist is on a journey, it could be great or small. There’s struggle and then some sort of redemption. The ending could be happy or sad, but something has changed and I, the audience, have changed as well.

Let’s consider again the hypothetical nature photograph. I’ve spent the past couple of weeks in the high desert, so I’ll take the canyon option. So many of the nature photographs that we are exposed to have an idealized, on vacation, I’d-like-to-be-there quality. If these photographs were to be stories, I’d tell you about lying on my back on a sand bench, falling asleep as I gaze at the stars though a frame of high canyon walls. Mmm.. that’s good.
But there’s more than just that. What about all those other elements that make up the stories we love? That kind of photograph would be just the happy ending destination. How many of your favorite stories consist of just a nicely resolved destination with no journey? What would my and your photographs look like if they contained more of the visual equivalent of a good story?
Hey, we’re an instant gratification society. Give us the destination and screw the journey. The comfort without pain. Who needs change, just gimme the cozy goodness. Interestingly, our great stories are not like this.
Photojournalism, portraiture and street photography are good at covering this fuller range. What would this look like in nature photography? What is a great nature photograph that goes beyond presenting an ending?
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Friday, November 14th, 2008
It’s been drizzling rain for days. Typically, I would appreciate photographing in the even, moody light provided by overcast days. But after days of hiking in the rain, a little sun would do much to warm my face and lift my spirits.
We’re driving south on highway 191, winding downhill from Yellowstone to Jackson Hole. Hannah is driving, and I’m gaping in awe. The clouds shift from a uniform, gray ceiling into billowing, moody islands, as if being shattered by the warmth above. Shafts of sunlight stream down. The light, delighted to greet land, kisses a spotlight on Shadow Mountain to the east. Through the clouds, there are hints of jagged, snow covered monoliths to my right. I can make out the base of a mountains, the Grand Tetons. But they are shrouded in mist, looming…hiding.
There’s public land up in Shadow Mountain, where you can camp freely for up to sixteen days at a time. Just north of Moose Junction, turn east on Antelope Flats, past the bison herd and up a dirt road through pines and aspens. We find a spot to park the camper van, but there’s a half eaten deer carcass nearby. After the bison encounter at Yellowstone, there’s no need to be around when a bear or coyotes return. We drive on and find a spot overlooking the valley and the Grand Tetons beyond.
We wake up to snow. Wonderful, cleansing snow blankets all we can see. The clouds are back, but this time I don’t care.

I love taking pictures in the snow. In a way, it feels like cheating. The snow simplifies the landscape. I can compose images considering the foreground, and the background is automatically uncluttered, clean and whitewashed.
We drove into the Grand Tetons and hiked a trail to Taggart Lake. As we walked, I imagined creating a portfolio of images from just one walk. I took about around a hundred pictures that day, more than usual. After editing, would I have enough images for a worthwhile portfolio? I could hope.


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Friday, November 7th, 2008
We were telling a friend about our plans for a road trip and she told us of her visit out west, to Yellowstone National Park. She was driving through the park when she found the way blocked by several parked cars. A crowd had left their vehicles to observe a herd of bison mulling around the road. One man, eager to take a picture, gets closer and closer to one of the bulls. The crowd shouts warnings to him, “Hey, I don’t think you should be getting that close. That bison looks a little nervous….” But he continues closer, unconcerned. I imagine him with eyes open wide in anticipation. He’s ready to commune with this icon of the American West. Just as he’s getting close enough, the bull snorts, lowers it’s head and charges forward. Wham! The would be photographer flips into the air and lands several yards away. I suppose that’s one way to communicate.
That story was on my mind last week as we drove into Yellowstone. We drive through the park and to a ranger’s station to ask about the back country. To get a backpacking permit, the park service requires you to watch a video that, among other things, describes possible wildlife encounters. While in the park, you may come across bison, elk, moose and bears. In Yellowstone, there are black bears and grizzly bears. To avoid surprising a bear you should sing songs and clap as you hike. The video shows a group of jolly hikers, singing and clapping through the woods. They look a little silly. They look a lot silly. There was no footage of the hikers encountering a bear, so I guess it worked. And as far as bison are concerned, I’m not planning on walking up to one within goring range, so I should be OK.
Hannah and I get the permits, strap on our packs and head into the woods. We joke about the bear avoidance tactics. We’re here to be in the wild, not to engage in some hi-dee-ho summer camp stroll. About ten minutes in, we come across some large animal tracks. Grizzly bear tracks. I give Hannah a concerned look. She looks back, a little panicked and asks, “What songs do you know?”
Cold gray rain falls throughout the day. We walk through fields of boiling acidic pools. Geysers erupt. The trail leads us through a snowy, icy pass across the Continental Divide and we arrive at a beautiful mountain lake. Birds call out and squirrels scurry. We sing and clap. There are no bear sightings.

The next evening, we come across two bison as we approach our camp site. I want to avoid being flipped into the air, so we walk away into the trees and wait. Twenty minutes later, the bison move on. We setup the tent and start preparing dinner. It’s been a long wet day, and we’re tired. Just as I manage to get a fire going, we spot one of the bison. Its the bigger one, with horns. I’ve heard that a bison can weigh up to two thousand pounds, and this one looked it. It munches on grass and edges closer to our camp. Good thing I got the fire going, that should keep him from getting any closer. He comes closer. The bison starts rubbing up against a tree, an aggressive behavior. He comes even closer, about twenty feet away. Hannah and I, now standing, slowly back away. He walks right up next to the fire. The camp is no longer ours. It was never ours, says the buffalo.
We circle around to the edge of the camp site. The bull is still there. The air chills as the sun starts to set. Hannah whispers, “Stay right there” and starts crawling toward our backpacks, toward the bison. I stand there, dumbfounded in my manliness. Hannah is brave, hardy and six months pregnant. She inches forward. I hold my breath. She sneaks on unnoticed toward the bison and scurries back with packs in hand. We scramble back to the trail, leaving the tent and half of our supplies behind. Ahead of us is a three mile walk through the dark. We utilize bear avoidance tactics as we go and arrive back at the van.

We’re back at the camp site the next morning. The ground around the camp is scraped and turned over, but otherwise everything was as we left it. We pack up our things and walk back out of the woods, grateful.
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Monday, November 3rd, 2008
The past week has been a blur of driving, day hikes, high winds and grasslands. We left Michigan on October 26th and spent the next several days traveling. From Marquette, Michigan to Minneapolis, Minnesota to South Dakota, the realm of Wall Drugs and the Badlands.
After miles and miles of grasslands, the ground suddenly opens to the Badland’s jaggedly eroded chasms. Bright sunny days and cold nights. We arrived in high winds, blowing up to 70 miles per hour. It took a consistent effort to stay standing when walking around. Not that the landscape seemed to care. The wind moved little, with the exception of swaying grass and the random tumbleweed.


From Badlands to Devil’s Tower, to rainy days in Yellowstone. The roads in Yellowstone National Park closed for the winter yesterday morning, pushing us onward to the Grand Tetons and Jackson Hole – beautiful to Yellowstone’s bizarre. Ah yeah… Yellowstone is bizarre. Stories to come.
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Monday, November 3rd, 2008
We’ve now been on the road for seventeen days. Camper van Chuck has been a champ, getting us through cold nights and icy mountain roads. Here’s more details on the van conversion.
View part 1 of the conversion process.
For the “living room” area of the van, we built a bench that folds out into a bed. This, in addition to the bed in the penthouse top, provides sleeping room for up to four people. Next came wood paneling and a shelf.

The bench

The bench in bed mode

Insulation and support for paneling

Paneling installed

The bench and shelf installed

The sink installed

Penthouse bed

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