I recently came across some work by Evan Baden titled Illuminati. As a video gamer and a father of two young DS owners I identified with his work immediately.
One of the biggest tourist attractions on Oahu island is Pearl Harbor. It is one of Americas most sacred memorials. There are 1.5 million visitors per year and most times there is a two hour wait to visit the Arizona. I was very surprised to see so many Japanese tourists there. The strange and surreal seemed to have come to life. I have hiked numerous WWII sites in the Pacific, specifically Guam and Iwo Jima. I thought it was only appropriate that I photographed at the location of the United States entry into the war. Although there was a somber feel to the place, it had a bit of Disneyesque feeling to it. Again, I took on the role of the tourist and had my photo taken by the facilities photographer. As I was having my picture taken I thought about what Joel Meyerwitz said in the August 2008 Focus Magazine.
"It's what photography can actually do best, to describe a moment in "the present", whatever that present is. It's the "eternal present". We sit here in 2008 and we pick up something from 1860 and we look at it from 2008 and it's in our lives. It fills us with wonder ... suddenly you're there and you forget where you are."
What will my son think in 20 or 50 years when he looks at our tourist souvenir? The meaning of the faux newspaper certainly has multiple meanings because of his mixed heritage. The issue is a complex one in which I am exploring in my work.
As a photographer I have a very difficult time when others take my picture. Whether this a control issue I'm not sure. The work that I have been doing in Japan was to photograph the hybridization of my children, myself and my wife. I made attempts to do some self portraits in one particular Japanese hot spa facility with no success. For this picture I thought that it was only appropriate that the Yunessun facility photographer did a portrait of me with my family. I wanted to de-skill most of the process. As with many portraits the truth is not always evident. For this one I intentionally made myself look bad, with no shirt (they provided all men with beach tops), stomach sticking out and looking strangely. I was one of only 16 gaijin in this facility and I wanted to externalize my anxieties. I wanted to take the roll of the Ugly American.
According to wikipedia:
Ugly American is an epithet used to refer to perceptions of loud, arrogant, demeaning, thoughtless and ethnocentric behavior of American citizens mainly abroad, but also at home. Although the term is usually associated with or applied to travelers and tourists, it also applies to US corporate businesses in the international arena.