RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘Vandals’

The Racetrack Playa in Death Valley National Park marred by vandals

21 Sep

Landscape photographer Kurt Lawson captured these images while on a photography trip to complete a special project about this area.

Check out his Website, Facebook, Flickr and 500px.  

It seems like only yesterday, a few weeks ago really, that we were writing about the vandalism at Cape Kiwanda on the Oregon coast. Yet here we are again with yet another case of vandalism – this time in Death Valley, California’s Racetrack playa. The area is known for its ‘moving stones’ and it appears that vandals have driven onto the playa and caused irreparable damage to the landscape.

The Racetrack in Death Valley National Park is a protected area in which large stones seem to move of their own accord across the playa. In reality they move whenever it rains – as the rain water freezes and winds cause the rocks (sometimes boulders of up to 600lbs) to move across the playa floor leaving a meandering trail behind them. Evidence of this was actually captured for the first time back in 2014. There are only two places in the world where this occurs naturally.

As he documented on his blog, landscape photographer Kurt Lawson was in the area scouting shooting locations for a project when he discovered the damage. He entered the protected area in the park and began to notice car tracks. It appeared that a group of individuals had driven a car across the the playa, thus carving car tracks permanently into an area where rain is a rarity.

Deep tracks were carved across the rock trails that take years to form.

What this means is that these tracks will be there for a very, very long time – if not forever. Some of the tire tracks cross trails made by the rocks. There are three parking lots in the Racetrack area, so vandals would have likely ignored the signs and at each one of them in order to carve their own paths through the playa as they left the designated parking areas. 

What appear to be initials have been chiseled about 1/8″ deep into the rock.

The type of damage that they caused isn’t repairable. What’s even more concerning is that whoever is responsible for it more than likely knew exactly what they were doing – there are ‘No motor vehicles beyond this point’ signs posted at every parking lot and along the roads between them. 

The area that was vandalized is well marked with these ‘No motor vehicle’ signs. You can see tire tracks off in the distance.  

After Cape Kiwanda, Yellowstone and now this – I’m really starting to question if what we’re doing to protect these areas is enough. Only time will tell.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on The Racetrack Playa in Death Valley National Park marred by vandals

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Opinion: Park vandals need to be stopped

07 Sep

Cape Kiwanda is one of the most beautiful locations on the Oregon coast – having visited the area on multiple occasions I can tell you first hand that no photo could ever do the area any sort of justice. It’s just that beautiful.

This rugged stretch of coastline that’s located near Pacific City, Oregon is home to a number of famous and much-loved rock formations that really can’t be found anywhere else on the West Coast. One of those rock formations known as ‘Duckbill Rock’ was a unique sandstone pedestal formation that was a compositional favorite amongst landscape photographers from around the world.

This image by Colby Drake Design illustrates how beautiful this sandstone pedestal was before vandals decided to put their own creative touch on the area. Instagram: @colbydrakedesign

In recent years, the rock has seen its fair share of abuse with various incidents of folks standing on top of it, leaning on it and laying on it for social media fame. I knew at some point that the rock would eventually succumb to the treatment, but I couldn’t have imagined that a group of tasteless individuals would have the audacity to push the rock formation over. Well, that’s exactly what happened on the afternoon of August 29th, 2016.

As Resource Travel and several others have reported, a group of three individuals approached the sandstone formation and started to push on it, rocking it back fourth until it toppled to the ground. Supposedly, their reason for doing this was because their friend jumped off the formation and broke or injured his leg. David Kalas, a bystander who witnessed the incident, decided to film the whole thing once he saw what was happening and post it to social media. Now, the Oregon State Parks and Recreational Department, in coordination with Oregon State Police are reviewing the incident and are determining how best to respond to the matter. 

This isn’t the first case of vandalism in our parks and it certainly won’t be the last, so what do we as a community need to do stop this from happening? This year alone has seen several acts of vandalism such as the filmmakers who decided to trample over the Grand Prismatic Spring in Yellowstone. How can we convince people that doing things like this for social media fame is just not okay?

It may be that tighter government regulations and harsher penalties for vandals would help. Casey Nocket, for example, plead guilty to seven misdemeanor counts of damaging government property. A self-identified artist, Nocket graffitied protected rock formations, posting photos of her work to an Instagram account. A misdemeanor can be punished by a fine of up to $ 100,000 and/or one year of prison, but Nocket received two years of parole and 200 hours of community service.

What do you think? How do you think we can deter individuals from doing things like this in the future? Feel free to share your thoughts by commenting below.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Opinion: Park vandals need to be stopped

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Vintage Vandals: 6 Artists Monsterize Thrift-Store Paintings

27 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

You seem to see them at every garage sale: a chipped and battered, faux-ornate, gold-colored frame containing a bland and boring landscape that only holds meaning for the original painter and perhaps its first owner. Others, however, see the same thing as a blank canvas of artistic opportunity, like Steven Leduc‘s contribution of a giant kraken to the calm tides of a sea scene found on the side of a street.

Or take Chris McMahon, who finds the most pastoral pastels and mundane scenes he can …then adds monsters to their midst, breathing new life into landscapes otherwise destined to gather dust or be discarded entirely.

Driscoll Reid of Portland, Oregon, in another form of more-abstract monster mashup, turns a large canyon small with disturbingly friendly-yet-dark giants. They step ominously through a tacky old forest and straddle the dull waterway in which they are reflected.


Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebUrbanist:

Painted Alive: Boldly Brilliant Body Paintings

The human body can be and do so many things, but when it’s used as a canvas for fine art, truly magical things can happen.
7 Comments – Click Here to Read More »»



20 Fabulous Light Graffiti Artists & Photographers

Light graffiti is uniquely ephemeral and inextricably intertwined with the art of photography, sometimes even invisible to the naked eye and apparent only on film.
15 Comments – Click Here to Read More »»



Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Vintage Vandals: 6 Artists Monsterize Thrift-Store Paintings

Posted in Creativity