I was sitting next to a guy on the plane with a striking deer photo on his laptop desktop. Found out when he’s not traveling the world as an engineer for GE, he’s living in a wooded area in Erie, Pennsylvania where he hooks up sensors with digital cameras and straps them onto trees in his backyard. When deer and other animals come near, the sensor picks up the motion and signals the camera to take a photo.

He showed me a slew of near-romantic shots of deer, raccoons, rabbits, squirrels, and other furry creatures that call his backyard their home. I started thinking about ways I could use this in the city… He started thinking about the eery future of his artwork… “This is the first time I’ll have photos of the deer alive before I kill it.” Images above from trailcam.com.

One Response to “Trail Cam”

  1. (S)wine Says:

    yea, but the thing is…it’s bullshit, that quote he said. it’s the 21st fucking Century and people are still going out and hunting. it isn’t enough we raise animals in order to process them; we have to go out and hunt them still. this sort of statement negates in every way the beauty of the photos. i cannot believe people are still going out and shooting animals. i love hearing those stories of hunters killing one another by mistake. Darwinism at its finest.

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Candy is an artist, designer, and urban planner in NYC. She likes to make city information more engaging through design and the creative use of public space. She also likes to improve the ways people share information. Read her blog, view her work, and feel the power.
Public chalkboards in Johannesburg to improve info-sharing between residents
A stenciled timeline of the history of Governors Island
Post-it note art transforming a storefront window into a neighborhood resource