Category: Film & Photography

Quotes for the Day

“Resist much.  Obey little.”       Walt Whitman

“Now.  Or Never.”         Thoreau

“In the mountains, there you feel free.”          T.S. Eliot

“There is no such thing as absolute dirt: it exists in the eye of the beholder.”                  Mary Douglas

And now…the funniest picture from last season.  Iris Noack and I were shooting with Steven Lloyd early in the season at Brighton.  This was the first day of the new Milicent lift being opened and the area was littered with rocks.  Steve and Jason West lined her up off this rock after inspection, and even though I knew I should’ve stayed behind the mound of snow, I had to see if she stuck it.  Every time Iris and I look at my goofy helmet head sticking out, we laugh hysterically.  Enjoy!

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New Published Ski Pictures

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Photo by Scott Markewitz

Cover of the Bird Magazine baby.  Made my first turns on Friday–the skiing was so good and it was great to catch up with old friends and new.

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Photo by Lee Cohen

Ski Salt Lake vacation planner and brochure cover.

Now I just have to stay focused for a few more weeks of school and then it’s ON.  Skiing everyday around in the Cottonwood Canyons, and hopefully some fun trips (including up to Jackson for the opening of the new tram).

Here’s another fun thing I put together tonight:

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I especially love the 02-04 dreadlock season pass pictures.

Hopefully I’ll have some fresh 08-09 ski pictures soon!  Stay tuned…

To being a dreamer…

“The young do not know enough to be prudent, and therefore they attempt the impossible, and achieve it, generation after generation.” —Pearl S. Buck

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As a little girl in Minnesota, I sat around and dreamed of skiing. Nevermind that the nearest “hill,” Mt. Frontenac was 45 minutes away and has now become a golf course. I’d scribble pictures of skiers doing daffies and spread-eagles in my notebooks, draw ski company logos, and daydream about being in the mountains of Utah.  The first time I used Photoshop in a computer class, I cut and pasted my 12-year-old buck-tooth school picture face onto the image of a skier jumping out of a helicopter.

When I moved to Utah at age 15, I had a new dream.  I went to a school with a ski academy, and many of my classmates were able to get out of school to go ski race.  I wanted this so badly, and pleaded to my principal to let me get on this program.  “You’re too old,” he said. “Besides, you don’t have any race results.” I remember the despair and misery I felt walking out of his office my first week of school, being the awkward new 10th grader in a 50-student class, mostly made up of students who had been there since they were 2.  “Lifers” they were called.

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But I didn’t give up.  I took advantage of every opportunity I had to sneak away for an afternoon powder day, skipping classes and driving cautiously in my 2-wheel drive Ford Escort wagon so I didn’t get caught.  The first day a new friend invited me to go skiing at Snowbird, I showed up in a pair of sunglasses because the foam in my goggles was all torn up.  He went into his car and threw me a pair of Smiths…”Wear these, you’ll need them when we get to the top of the tram.”  I struggled so hard to keep up with him that day, but after run one, I was lost in the woods, struggling to get my long, skinny skis out of the powder.

I’d sit in class, waiting for graduation, while I listened to the ski racers talking about their recent adventures to exotic places like Austria and Bogus Basin.  As soon as I graduated, I skied every single day, non-stop and wanted to meet everybody in the Cottonwood Canyons to find some new friends so I could redefine myself–I wanted to be an extreme, big mountain skier.  I was trying to find acceptance and love and adrenaline, to fill the hole, to balance the chemicals inside my head.  “Go to school,” family and friends told me when I talked about my dream of becoming a professional skier.  I felt the same way I did when I walked out of the principal’s office that day, dejected but more and more determined.

Now, they see my ski pictures and are proud.  My parents have pictures of me skiing and rock climbing all over their offices at work.  I may not be traveling around the world living the rockstar life, but accomplishing what I have has made me realize I can do anything and everything I want to (law school, business school, design, acting, politics…), and that I don’t have to live my life the way society tells me to.  I think about all my friends now, and I see how lucky we are.  We never accepted that you had to just go to college and work in our exploitive capitalist society, leaving its laborers with that dreadful sense of alienation.  We’ve carved out an existence for ourselves — when people told us time and time again that it was impossible.

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Now, as I’m stuck in school again, I look out the window and drift into a daydream where I am at the top of a peak somewhere in the Wasatch, watching the sun rise from there instead of in the classroom.  But I know it will be soon, so I turn my attention back to the teacher’s lecture and remind myself it’s just a few more weeks…

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Here’s a characterature my brother-in-law drew for me when I was 10.

Children of Winter

I just got home from seeing the new Warren Miller movie, Children of Winter.  As much as I love TGR, Matchstick, Poor Boys and other ski flicks, Warren Miller films bring me back to my childhood, like I think they do for many other people based on the turn-out of young children and families tonight.  Anyway, I have to admit, that up until this point, I have had a hard time getting psyched up for skiing this winter.  My classes in American Government and Labor Economics have kept my mind occupied with current political issues.  However, tonight, while I was watching the Utah section and the deep powder skiing, I got this tingling sensation throughout my body but especially in my brain.  I swear it was pure dopamine, triggering my inner addict that only comes out in the winter.  Instantly, my mind started to race about all the things I need to do to get in shape and ready for the winter.  The project ideas started flowing and I had to pull out my planner in the middle of the movie to write them down.  I must get back into the yoga and pilates routine as well as work on some tricks on the indoor diving boards.

So…on another completely random note, I have a studio shoot coming up for Rubberball, a stock photography agency in Provo, and I had to put together some wardrobe options and conceptual ideas and take pictures and send them over to them so we can figure out what we are going to be shooting.

Here are some of my self portraits (and please don’t laugh at the idea of me sitting at my house producing these shots, as hysterical as it may be–I’m very thankful none of my brother’s came over during this process).

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I dressed up in my dad’s business suit since I don’t have my own.  Menswear is so much fun to dress up in.  So much easier than putting together a woman’s outfit.

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More menswear.

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Chilling by the fish pond.  The hat is one of my latest creations and the skirt is thrift store vintage.

Ski Mag Cover Girl Baby!

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The contents page says, “Just another day at Alta for Caroline Gleich.”  This photo was taken sometime mid-season.  I remember rolling out of bed that morning to see bluebird skis and about a foot of new snow, which was pretty standard for last season.  Anyway, I quickly saw that I had missed a call from Lee Cohen, and the message he left was telling me to get my butt out of bed and get up to the hill.  We met in the parking lot at Alta, went up Wildcat chairlift and I hiked the shoulder a few times.  It’s really funny, because he kept telling me how hard we were slaying it, and I thought he was just getting excited about nothing.  But now I know not to question his wisdom and years of experience.