Retro-Grouch
Veteran
Hello, Chris. I have been a long-time "lurker" on RFF, and one of the chief reasons for my return visits has been this Fort Wayne thread. I have finally joined, and one of the first orders of business is to thank you for these pictures!
There's humor here, of course, and much that is quirky and weird. But overall, I see an austere and solemn body of work that very effectively conveys the great American tragedy of the past fifty years. As a resident of rural New Mexico, I know what life is like for small-town Americans in fly-over country. You've captured the essence of that life.
I do hope that you have made arrangements for this work to be archived, ideally with historical/artistic institutions that will preserve it properly. Think of Evans' work, and how it has only grown in importance and emotional resonance with the passage of time. I'm sure that would be the case for your work, as well. In the future, people could turn to it to understand who we were, and who they are, and how they came to live in whatever their world might be.
Keep, shooting, please!
There's humor here, of course, and much that is quirky and weird. But overall, I see an austere and solemn body of work that very effectively conveys the great American tragedy of the past fifty years. As a resident of rural New Mexico, I know what life is like for small-town Americans in fly-over country. You've captured the essence of that life.
I do hope that you have made arrangements for this work to be archived, ideally with historical/artistic institutions that will preserve it properly. Think of Evans' work, and how it has only grown in importance and emotional resonance with the passage of time. I'm sure that would be the case for your work, as well. In the future, people could turn to it to understand who we were, and who they are, and how they came to live in whatever their world might be.
Keep, shooting, please!