victoria-scott

trans and gay and enjoying it

  • she/her

I write about cars for a living and I take photographs to stay alive. Expect to see a lot of photography here.

sometimes I post nsfw images of my body. I tag them as adult content, but this is not a purely professional account - this is where I am myself.



january 13, 2023

I do struggle sometimes with the fact that I like cars so much, that cars fundamentally represent such a large portion of my work, and that no matter how hard I try to escape the gravitational pull of the automobile my work (of abandoned motels and old gas stations and other mausoleums to the American ideal of the road trip), even devoid of cars, always seems to reflect my inner fascination with cars.

But admittedly, 1) they are a huge part of life in America and 2) my hyperfixations chose me, not the other way around. No one would claim that Eggleston's work shooting shitbox 50s cars in the mid-70s was worse for including the cars; the man had a way of using American automobilia like few others because he fundamentally understood that cars begin life as status symbols and slowly become litter, and he shot every phase of that process with a keen understanding of a vehicle's life cycle. I hope, someday, my work feels the same to me.

I'm probably not there yet, but in an attempt to let myself try, I will make today's photo simple: here is a photo of some garbage in a landfill that I found interesting.


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in reply to @victoria-scott's post:

I mean, I would argue that there's nothing fundamentally wrong with liking cars; they're deliberately designed to be attractive objects. They're also value-neutral, like any other tool; I would argue that it is axiomatic that tools are value-neutral. (this is wildly open to opinion obviously but it's not really my point).

The social context of cars, however, very much isn't value-neutral, since social context strips away neutrality quite efficiently. Is that the source of your trepidation? It feels like it is to me judging by the way you're comparing your works to similar ones, but I'm asking because it struck me as interesting that you have doubts about the validity of simply liking cars.

it's mostly just that I want to stop being perceived as "an automotive photographer" and I wish to become "an artistic photographer", and every photo of a car I take seemingly takes me further from that goal, tbh. cars themselves are interesting and the way we use them and culturally identify them is fascinating to me, it's just that I am tired of an image of a car being "wow cool car" instead of "wow cool shot". I feel like the cars are carrying my work, rather than vice-versa