Urizen Freaza

Spring Polaroid Week Roundup | Urizen Freaza

Dear FSC friends, this is Urizen Freaza.


I dislike riding a bike, I can't climb a wall, I hate the idea of bungee jumping, skating sounds counterproductive and the concept of jumping from a plane is the closest I can imagine to a living nightmare. At some point in my life I realized I like to keep my feet touching the ground. Why? No clue. Does it make any sense? Probably not.

In these times of AI synthesized images lurking around every corner, of contradictory misinformation everywhere, of infinite gray areas: there's no one dogma to follow, there's no path in front of us, just a million possibilities. There's somehow comfort in shooting a Polaroid, in looking through the viewer and turning that scene into an object, something in your hands. A Polaroid is evidence, a Polaroid is reality, even if that's just in a tangential, embedded way. It's a link to now or to then, and definitely something certain, that is or was there. Even if manipulated, scratched, painted, lifted, even when that's not even part of the message or relevant for the intent, Polaroids are real.

I like my Polaroids just as I like my feet touching the ground.


Here's again a respectfully imperfect roundup of the photos tagged with #fscpolaroid on instagram during Spring Polaroid Week 2023. Please go check the artists’ profiles, and if you like what you see, follow them and show them love. And most importantly, check out the Polaroid Week pool on Flickr, on Twitter, and on Instagram .


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Urizen Freaza was born in Tenerife in 1982 and is since 2010 based in Berlin. He's a self-taught photographer and film-maker. Self-taught meaning that this is a path he's still walking, while hoping there is always more path to walk. He's a member of the Film Shooters Collective and part of the team behind the analogueNOW! festival in Berlin. See more of his work on his website and on Instagram.

Spring 2021 Polaroid Week Roundup | Urizen Freaza

Dear FSC friends, this is Urizen Freaza,

Spring Polaroid Week was a looong time ago (3 o's at least), and as usual it takes me forever to write this. This time I have a good excuse, and for that purpose, here's a fact that no one other than me can be interested in: I've become a father. This thing that is happening to me right now, reminded me of what instant film was originally made for: to prove that one was there, that this and that thing, and that other thing, all of it, existed. A feeling, a sensation, something that is doomed to change. Or disappear. Even when everything is gone, polaroids remain and remind us how it was. Maybe they don't show us how it was exactly, but they remind us of it. Even if you can't remember it, even if you don't believe it happened. How can you deny a polaroid if it's there, between your fingers?

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Here's a respectful and imperfect roundup of the photos submitted to Film Shooters Collective and the ones tagged as #fscpolaroid on instagram during Spring Roid Week 2021. Please go check the artist's profiles, and if you like what you see, follow them and show them love. And most importantly, check out the Polaroid Week pool on Flickr, on Twitter, and on Instagram .


Connect

Urizen Freaza was born in Tenerife in 1982 and is since 2010 based in Berlin. He's a self-taught photographer and film-maker. Self-taught meaning that this is a path he's still walking, while hoping there is always more path to walk. He's a member of the Film Shooters Collective and part of the team behind the analogueNOW! festival in Berlin. See more of his work on his website and on Instagram.

Fall Polaroid Week 2020 Roundup | Urizen Freaza

Dear FSC friends, this is Urizen Freaza.

This is the 5th or 6th time that Film Shooters Collective in their infinite generosity (and patience, as it always takes me a while) has asked me to do a Polaroid Week roundup. And I love it every, single, time. Because it’s an excuse to discover new polaroid artists, and the pictures I see feed my brain and my soul through my eyes. Every time, I write a little text raging about how cool Polaroid Week, and how fantastic the community behind it are.

This time I have to come up with something new to say. So this time I want to explain why I love this medium. Without fancy words, clear and simple: because you can touch it, and because it’s expensive. Let me elaborate on this non-sense.

Everything we see will disappear. Every moment we live is fleeting between our fingers. The look of a loved one, the light hitting that glass piece, the taste of your grandma’s sweets. They won’t be there in one second, one month, a hundred years from now. I can’t think of a more human impulse that to hold that moment. Imagine pressing these moments into a 8.8 by 10.7 centimeters square that collects all these perceptions and feelings into an object that you can touch and take (take!) with you. Something that won't be deleted once this hard-drive crashes. Something that will survive. I believe Polaroids were made for this.

And that’s the power of instant film, and that’s why people start using it. And then we pay ~20$ for 8 shots. And not all of them are great. And you can’t throw them away, how could you?! These are pieces of reality, magic talismans that trapped a memory, a look, a smell. So you soak them, cut them open, lift them, sew them, burn them… squeeze as much as you can out of them. Instant film photographers are in many occasions rather instant film artists. The image is just a starting point. It’s one of the most experimental communities I know of. And I believe that’s the power of the medium, that it lives right between reality and manipulation.

Here's a humble, heterogeneous and imperfect roundup of the photos submitted to Film Shooters Collective and the ones tagged as #fscpolaroid on Instagram during Fall Polaroid Week 2020. Please go check the artist's profiles, and if you like what you see, follow them and show them love in any way you can. And most importantly, check out the Polaroid Week pool on Flickr, on Twitter, and on Instagram for the full picture!


Connect


Urizen Freaza was born in Tenerife in 1982 and is since 2010 based in Berlin. He's a self-taught photographer and film-maker. Self-taught meaning that this is a path he's still walking, while hoping there is always more path to walk. He's a member of the Film Shooters Collective and part of the team behind the analogueNOW! festival in Berlin. See more of his work on his website and on Instagram.