Posts

Dominion Day,

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  Canada Day used to sit under a different name, Dominion Day, and that old label still leaves a kind of structural shadow over the present. Dominion Day belongs to a world where the holiday is spoken from above, where identity is staged through institutions, where ceremony carries the weight of explanation. Canada Day does something quieter but more unstable. It stops explaining itself. The change in name in 1982 is not cosmetic. It marks a transfer of authorship. What was once a constitutional framing becomes a civic surface that anyone can step onto. The holiday no longer needs a central voice because it has been distributed outward into participation itself. The meaning is no longer declared. It is assumed, repeated, and circulated. This is why the “great” Canada Day video is never really about content in the traditional sense. It is about recognition speed. It works before interpretation arrives. A flag, a burst of fireworks, a fragment of “Happy Canada Day,” these are not mes...

The Hidden Art Behind Cosplay Nobody Talks About

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A Magazine Cover From a Fantasy Universe  Cosplay has escaped the convention floor. This GreatGuyAAA experiment transforms cosplay into a magazine cover — exploring the connection between fantasy, fashion, celebrity culture, and the way we build modern mythology. Are costumes just costumes… or are they the new language of identity? GreatGuyAAA examines the hidden stories behind the images we consume and the worlds people create
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  Another Day in the Life of Ed Scholz in Toronto Toronto reveals itself not only in its grand spectacles but also in its ordinary moments—those fleeting encounters on sidewalks, outside office towers, and at the edges of civic life where the city's countless stories briefly intersect. Wandering with camera in hand, Ed Scholz documents these transient episodes, assembling an informal visual diary of a metropolis in perpetual motion. In this frame, two police officers stand beside a marked cruiser outside a downtown building. At first glance, the image appears routine, another fragment from the daily machinery of urban life. Yet closer examination reveals a more complex narrative. Much of the drama in this photograph lies in what cannot be fully seen. The partially obscured figure near the vehicle introduces questions of authority, detention, and public space while preserving ambiguity. The viewer is presented not with a definitive event, but with its perimeter. The photograph does ...
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 江戸門戸 (Ed Scholz) uses photography to investigate how people see, think, and interact with the world around them. Blending documentary observation with conceptual inquiry, his images explore attention, memory, nature, and modern life. Through street, documentary, and observational photography, he seeks to document the zeitgeist of the places and times he inhabits.
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  The History of Group 7     Group 7: A Brief History of a Meaningless Empire October 17, 2025 — The Accidental Genesis On October 17, Sophia James uploaded seven nearly identical videos into the indifferent machinery of TikTok, an act that in any earlier era would have been understood as trivial, experimental, and instantly forgettable. But the algorithm, that modern substitute for judgment, selected one: “Group 7.” It is worth pausing on what this actually means. Not philosophically—there is nothing to elevate here—but practically. A machine optimized for attention made a selection, and in doing so accidentally authored a mythology. No intention, no message, no content in any meaningful sense. Just preference without reasoning. And from that, an identity was born. October 18–19, 2025 — The Discovery of Membership Without Meaning By October 18, people were announcing themselves as “Group 7” with the solemn enthusiasm normally reserved for things like citizensh...

The Long Walk Home by Joe (E. Scholz)

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  The Long Walk Home by Joe (E. Scholz) A bridge is one of humanity's oldest promises: that separation can be defeated. Here the promise extends into a forest so dense it begins to resemble thought itself. The two figures become less important than the act of moving forward. They are explorers inside a green labyrinth, disappearing toward a destination concealed by perspective. The photograph asks a simple question: is the journey still a journey when the path has already been drawn Of my recent recent images, this one is the opposite of the dark romantic image of Izzath and Carmen. That photograph was about intimacy hidden within shadow. This photograph is about possibility revealed through space. One is a memory. This is an invitation. https://joe-average123.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-long-walk-home-by-joe-e-scholz.html
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  The Meanings of Kamibushi Kamibushi is not tied to a single written form. Like many Japanese-derived names, its meaning shifts depending on the characters used. This ambiguity is not a weakness but a strength, allowing the name to function as a conceptual lens through which photography, culture, and observation can be understood. One interpretation is 神武士 (Kami-Bushi), meaning "Divine Warrior" or "Spirit Warrior." Here, kami refers to spirit, presence, or the unseen forces that animate the world, while bushi refers to a warrior. In the context of photography, the Kamibushi becomes a witness who confronts reality directly and returns with evidence. The camera becomes a tool not of conquest but of observation. A second interpretation is 神節, which can be understood as "Sacred Rhythm" or "Spirit Rhythm." This reading shifts attention away from conflict and toward patterns. Cultures move in rhythms. Trends emerge, rise, and disappear. Political mo...