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{"id":9021,"date":"2022-03-25T09:00:11","date_gmt":"2022-03-25T09:00:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/lossi36.com\/?p=9021"},"modified":"2023-03-15T11:34:03","modified_gmt":"2023-03-15T11:34:03","slug":"eastern-walls-interview-with-giulia-blocal","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lossi36.com\/2022\/03\/25\/eastern-walls-interview-with-giulia-blocal\/","title":{"rendered":"Eastern walls – interview with Giulia Blocal"},"content":{"rendered":"
Congratulations! Your blog recently turned ten years old. Tell us how you started and what Blocal Travel has grown into.\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Like many blogs in the old days, Blocal started as a personal journal to collect my travels. I already had a blog while living in the Balkans, so when I moved back to Italy I wanted to start a new one about my life at home. The name stands for “Be Local” -as a way of traveling and discovering a place. The general idea was to spend some time in a place (from a few months to a few years) and write about that place from a local perspective, sharing info and tips for travelers and locals alike. Generally speaking, this is what happened (I just moved back to Italy after 3 years living in Amsterdam), but over the years I also wrote about places I just visited for a few weeks, usually to attend street art festivals. Please also check <\/span>this article<\/b><\/a>, where I tell my blogging story better.<\/span><\/p>\n You\u2019ve worked for STRAAT, the museum of graffiti and street art in Amsterdam. You\u2019ve worked \u201cbehind the scenes\u201d and now in a larger role: managing the website and writing specialized texts and multimedia content! You\u2019ve just finished writing the Museum catalog and the result is a beautiful 300-page artbook any street art connoisseur would love to have on their shelves. Tell us more about the process and what you brought to your role in the creation of the catalog.\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n I don\u2019t work at STRAAT anymore, I quit my job there as the Communication and Content manager almost one year ago and I moved back to Rome, my hometown. I have several blog posts about STRAAT, which I recommend every street art aficionado check out.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n This is the <\/span>prologue<\/b><\/a>. I wrote it in 2018 after a trip to Amsterdam. I was there to write about a street art project in the south-eastern outskirts of the city, during which I first heard about the project of the museum, I visited the vacant warehouse and fell in love with the project. From that moment, I knew I had to work there.<\/span><\/p>\n I eventually moved to Amsterdam in October 2018 and shared many aspects of my life in Amsterdam on the blog and on Instagram, but I couldn\u2019t share much about the museum (it was written in my contract), so I haven\u2019t written much about it – only as part of my life in Amsterdam, sharing my working experience and some doubts about my future.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n One year later, the catalog was released. I\u2019m very happy about it, and super proud of the work I did, so I wrote this <\/span>post<\/b><\/a> about the editorial process behind it.<\/span><\/p>\n Lastly, I just published an article about STRAAT museum for people who want to visit it, and so not much about my personal story working there, but more about what you can see there and how the exhibition became what it is now, explaining each section, showing my favorite artworks for each section. That article is <\/span>here<\/b><\/a>. It\u2019s a general article about the museum but from an insider perspective.<\/span><\/p>\n Your monthly newsletter is quite popular. Your work transcends many types of media: Youtube vlogs, Instagram posts, blog posts, and even live streaming! Why so many mediums? What motivates you to keep on creating? How do you deal with burnout in the midst of so many different projects?<\/b><\/p>\n Yes, I do work with many types of media, but it\u2019s no secret that my favorite media are the blog and the newsletter. So although I do use Instagram now (I deactivated my Instagram account a couple of times in the past, for several months, because it\u2019s a medium that I don\u2019t like much), Youtube and more media, I\u2019m not hiding the fact that my focus and main efforts are in the newsletter. Blocal is a personal project and a one-woman show, I\u2019m working on everything alone and in my spare time, so my priorities must be clear (for myself and for my readers). That\u2019s why I always stress that the newsletter is my favorite way to stay in touch, there are different kinds of content I create only for my monthly newsletter and which don\u2019t end up anywhere else (simply because I don\u2019t have the time to \u201ctranslate\u201d the same content into a format good on Instagram, a format good for Youtube, a format good for Facebook, a format good for the blog, a format good for Tik Tok, etc).\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n But back to your questions: <\/span>why so many mediums?<\/span><\/i> Because I do like to \u201cdeclinate\u201d content into many different mediums (from a creative point of view, for example, I perfectly know my limits with Youtube and video editing, but I still do it every now and then because I like video editing). From a creative point of view, what I like to do is to live somewhere for some time (= Be a Local) and share my experience on different mediums through different creative products (videos for Youtube, storytelling for the blog, a more personal perspective for the newsletter, photos for Instagram, etc). Obviously, this is in a dream scenario because I don\u2019t have the time to do all of that and I don\u2019t have the skills to do it professionally, but I still like the idea -that\u2019s why I keep all these mediums \u201con\u201d, although I\u2019m not posting on each of them every week.\u00a0 They all are creative outlets for me, a medium to express some form of creativity (video for Youtube, writing for the blog, etc).\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n What motivates me? <\/span><\/i>I simply like to tell stories, to share my experiences. I\u2019ve been journaling almost every day since when I was 6 years old. I kept travel journals even when I was a child. I used to print the photos and stick them in my childhood journals! It\u2019s just something I love, especially now that it helps me connect with artists and creative people worldwide.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n About burnouts, I still don\u2019t have a solution. Therapy does help, though.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n A lot of travelers follow your work for the maps! You share all your carefully curated Google maps of urban art all over the world on your site. Although many of your destinations are not known for their tourism, you invite travelers all around the world with your \u201coff the beaten path\u201d guides. You often share the exact streets and pin locations of your findings. What is the motivation behind making your content free and easily accessible? Are you worried about sharing the \u201csecrets\u201d of small and lesser-known locales? This is very different from the cryptic, often elitist attitude that many fine art lovers embody.<\/b><\/p>\n Ah, and don\u2019t get me started on Urbex fans. They are even more cryptic and harsher than street art lovers, and I received many angry messages from Urbex people because I was sharing GPS locations of some abandoned spots, while the rule in that world is keeping everything super secret. Eventually, I stopped writing so much about Urbex (they won!) because I was tired of all the messages from haters while all I wanted to do was to provide information for free to help my fellow travelers. I wasn\u2019t earning anything from it while spending money to go on a trip and document the locations for my community, and spending a lot of energy writing about it and sharing my knowledge for free. So yeah, I still write about Urbex (I posted about some abandoned villas seized from the mafia, in Sicily, just last July) but very seldom, because I don\u2019t like the \u201cattitude\u201d of that community.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Street art lovers aren\u2019t so aggressive, thankfully. Nobody ever complained I\u2019m sharing locations of street art because my community is happy to find all the Google maps on my blog.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n By the way, on the maps, there aren’t only street art spots, but also pubs, museums, parks and other things I happen to like while living in that place. It\u2019s simply what I would like to find online when I\u2019m going to a place, either on vacation or to live there for a while. So I guess I\u2019m doing it for good karma.<\/span><\/p>\n One of your most popular posts is about Abandoned Places in Croatia. Why do you think this type of off-the-beaten-path type of tourism has become so popular?<\/b><\/p>\n I think it has something to do with the super cool photos you can take in such places (and so Instagram fame, which is a kind of attitude I don\u2019t like, but what can I do? Street art became popular in recent years for the same reason). As I wrote above, I almost stopped posting about abandoned places because the Urbex people complain a lot, and I don\u2019t have time (and energy) for drama. I do this for fun. When something isn\u2019t fun anymore because I receive tons of messages from haters, I don\u2019t \u201chave to\u201d keep posting about it only because some of my most popular posts are about abandoned places. I certainly like to have many readers, but it\u2019s more important to be happy and relaxed during the whole blogging process (it\u2019s a marathon!) than getting stressed (and harassed) to publish something because it might become \u201cpopular\u201d.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n You have been a media partner of some important street art festivals around Europe. Can you tell us more about that?\u00a0\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n Yeah, I\u2019m very proud of the work I did for IBUG festival (in Germany); they gave me complete creative freedom. I wrote about my experience for IBUG in 2017 <\/span>here<\/b><\/a> and in 2018 <\/span>here<\/b><\/a>. Have a look, because they are really the best example of what I do when I\u2019m covering a street art festival.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n I\u2019m also super proud of having been invited to multiple editions of Nuart (Norway) and Nuart Aberdeen (Scotland), which is the most important street art festival worldwide, but I don\u2019t have a good archive about that on the blog, because in the first years I was attending the festival as the representative of other street art blogs, which were the media partners.<\/span><\/p>\n You share that the Balkans is your favorite destination for street art. Why has it captured your heart and what makes it special from other more well-known destinations, such as your home country of Italy?<\/b><\/p>\n Not really for street art, it\u2019s my favorite region in general for traveling. I lived in Slovenia for a while. I had a car and I was doing many road trips around the Balkans with friends. I love the people there and the nature, especially the Balkan attitude (way of life) in general. It\u2019s very difficult to compare it to Italy (I obviously love Italy as well, it\u2019s such a beautiful place), but I can say that usually, as a traveler, you are most fascinated by something different and more exotic than your home country. Italy is a wonderful country to explore, especially off-the-beaten-path, but it\u2019s my country, my mother language, my culture, so it feels less “traveling” in a way\u2026\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n You lived in Slovenia for two years and you\u2019ve been back many times. What drew you to that part of the world?<\/b><\/p>\n It\u2019s truly an amazing country to visit, mostly for nature but also for art (in Ljubljana and Maribor). As for me, I do have a personal bond with Slovenia, I became a different person while living there so I always think in a romantic way about that country. Also, I still have friends living there, so often I go back to visit them. It\u2019s more of a personal bond I would say, but the country is beautiful nevertheless, especially if you like hiking and mountains in general.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n