Appalachia

Sarah Hoskins Postcard Set Giveaway

sarahhoskins-proofsandpostcards CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR WINNER – MELISSA LYTTLE!

UPDATE: Due to flu and holiday travel, I'm extending the deadline until Sunday, 6 January 2013, at 11:59 p.m. EST. The winner will be announced Monday morning, 7 January 2013.

I'm thrilled to announce your chance to win a set of Sarah Hoskins postcards. Sarah will select five photographs from her "The Homeplace" series and Master Printer Chuck Kelton of Kelton Labs in New York City will make gelatin silver prints on Kodak F2 Kodabromide paper.

To enter the drawing, visit Sarah Hoskins' website and go to "The Homeplace." Browse the photographs, find your favorite image, and copy the caption. Paste the caption, along with a description of why it’s your favorite from this series, in the comments section of this page. That’s it! One person will be randomly selected from the submissions to receive the set of postcards. The deadline for the giveaway is Monday, 31 December 2012, at 11:59 p.m. EST. The winner will be announced New Year's morning, 1 January 2013.

Good luck and thanks for sharing!

 

Looking at Appalachia | Sarah Hoskins - Part Two

Sarah_Hoskins_028 We all have different reasons for why pictures resonate with us. Sometimes those reasons are easily defined and sometimes it's a bit of a mystery. As a photographer and as someone who spends a good deal of time looking at photographs, one of the most beautiful qualities of a picture is its ability to offer me something familiar without necessarily having a direct connection to the subject, something I can't quite put my finger on that keeps me coming back.

Sarah Hoskins' dynamic photographs offer us a look into something familiar, where there exists an established, poetic intimacy. Though the people in these photographs aren't familiar to me,  I recognize the intimacy, the humanity. We are inundated with pictures today that attempt to photograph humanity, yet lack a true sense of humanity behind the camera (and in the distribution of the pictures once made). There is something to be said for commitment to long form projects like Hoskins'.

Trust is something that is established and maintained over time. Cultivated. Appalachia has historically been misrepresented, as have African-Americans. When you combine these two truths, it would seem as if the deck is stacked against anyone trying to make serious work here (rightfully so), yet Hoskins connected and she stayed. This is what the process of staying, sticking around, of not taking looks like. There is making and sharing and returning to make and share again. She is not asking for vulnerability without offering her own. For me, this negates the question of whether or not an outsider can truly document a community not their own.

As Hoskins and I spoke by phone again a few days ago, she was baking cookies - eight dozen, in fact - in preparation for a road trip back to Kentucky to attend a wedding of someone in the communities she's photographed for years. Her entire family was invited to share in this special day with what's become her extended family, her community.

Capturing these images on film is a testament to the pace and cadence of her work. She told me she has about one percent of her images edited and printed, which means what we've seen thus far barely scratches the surface of the work she's compiled. Like the lasting friendships Hoskins has built for more than a decade, these photographs will stand as a testament to the love and strength of a Homeplace I hope we all are fortunate enough to find.

Stay tuned for details on how you can win a set of signed postcards from Sarah Hoskins.

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Miss Margaret Raglin

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Richard Zion Hill Days

Merytle B on her way to church<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /> 2011

 

All photographs © Sarah Hoskins. 1. Farrier Duane, 2012. 2. House of History, 2004. 3. Kayla's Baptism, 2010. 4. New Car, New Zion, 2010. 5. Miss Margaret Raglin, Zion Hill, 2009. 6. Ironing Curtains, 2009. 7. Mac, 2006. 8. Family Reunion, 2003. 9. Apples and Basket, 2004. 10. Homecoming, 2003. 11. Lydia at 100, 2006. 12. Walker Sisters, 2012. 13. Window View, 2003. 14. Richard Hughes, First Annual Zion Hill Days, Zion Hill, 2007. 15. Merytle B on her way to church, 2011.

Looking at Appalachia | Sarah Hoskins - Part One

When you think of Lexington, Kentucky, you may not think of it being synonymous with Appalachia. But Lexington, just on the borderline of what the Appalachian Regional Commission defines as Appalachia, is by extension, Appalachian, heavily influenced by the people and culture of Appalachia proper (which also includes northern Alabama and northeastern Mississippi). When Sarah Hoskins first contacted me about participating in this series, it was clear to me her work was a good fit. I think you'll agree.

Her work in and around the black hamlets of Lexington is striking. Her approach to making these pictures has always been about relationships. Like most places in Appalachia, photographers, documentarians, and the like come to get something and they leave. Hoskins didn't come to just "get." For more than a dozen years, she's returned to these communities, these sacred places, to her friends and now extended family. It may be stating the obvious, but she knows this work couldn't be done without the people. Her work honors them.

Back Home to The Homeplace

In the fall of 2000 I stood in the middle of Frogtown Lane map in hand, I didn’t know a soul. On June 11, 2012 I lay strapped down in an emergency room in Somerset, Kentucky a hundred miles away from that lane.

I had left the African American hamlets of the Inner Bluegrass Region that morning, where I had been photographing for the past week as well as the past twelve years. My daughter and I had been on our way to Tuskegee University, where I was to give a lecture on my photography project that I call "The Homeplace." The residents of the hamlets arrived like the cavalry in Somerset within hours of the car accident, dropping everything to rescue my daughter and myself as well as all of our belongings including my cameras and film from the wreckage that was our car. The sky passes in blurs, fleeting and fast moments.  It began as I stood looking through a machine of glass and mirrors trying in an instant to capture all that was. I now feel the blur of lives that have left and I have lost. I am left with those static moments.  Wishing those moments would move and bring me back to all that was.

I am strapped down and can’t move. I know I have something running through my veins, as the pain is less. The florescent lights overhead are all that I can see. They blur as I am wheeled quickly through the halls. I am the patient that they make way for.  The captain of the medivac is still pushing me.  Numbers are called out, stats of heart rate and blood pressure. What is my name? What is my birthday? Do I remember what happened? I feel the tears run down my cheeks. I don’t. I know my daughter is alive and safe. I know that the medivac team rescued me from the small, ill equipped, and scary hospital that I was in. I have always been afraid of helicopters, today in my morphine haze I have never been so grateful to have been in one.

I am being wheeled through the in the emergency room of UK hospital in Lexington, Kentucky.  I am brought into yet another emergency room. I can still only look up. I see the eyes that are Derek’s, the same eyes his daddy had. He strokes my hair that is matted and covered in dried blood. His warm coal colored hand holds my cold pasty white one. The nurse says, “Only relatives are allowed in here. How are you two related?” I hear the smile in Derek’s voice, “It’s a long story."

In the decade after the Civil War African American settlements sprang up around the horse farms in Kentucky’s six-county Inner Bluegrass Region. These villages or hamlets, as they have come to be known were originally inhabited by freed slaves who were needed to work on the area farms. Today, many of the residents are descendents of the freed men and women who founded them. In some cases as many as six generations of a family have lived in succession on a “homeplace” in these communities. Some of these hamlets are prospering while the existence of others is tenuous. With each visit I make, I am continually told of people and places where “you need to go.”

The Homeplace is comfort. The place you can go back to no matter how many years have passed. It will always hold something familiar something safe.

My project is a tribute to the residents of these hamlets, a salute to the elders who learned of slavery at their grandparent’s knees and endured the Jim Crow south. Who lived ‘separate but equal’ and saw the decades of milestones and their impacts, including desegregation, social segregation, and ultimately the election of Barack Obama. The residents did much more than endure and survive negative circumstances; they rose above them and thrived.

Over the years, like so many other documentary photographers, I apply for grants to help me fund my work. I would love to be rewarded with funding; it would certainly help. But rewards come in different forms, as was the case when I first read this letter written over eight years ago by one of the residents:

"Her presence in our communities over the past four years has renewed a pride in the old hamlets. She is well-known and received by the older members of the communities who are often very skeptical when visitors “show up” but yet have been revitalized because someone is taking the time to show sincere interest and concern for them. I only wish I could fully express the importance of her work and what it means to all of us. From Maddoxtown to Jimtown, from New Zion to New Vine, from Utteringtown to Peytontown, from Bracktown to Cadentown (to name a few) she has made good friends who eagerly anticipate her arrival each time she ventures from Chicago, Illinois. As a result she has compiled a list of names—friends given to her by local residents, that is quite extensive and she manages to keep in contact with many of us by phone. She is so highly favored because she did not come to take away from us like so many do, but unknowingly she has restored a sense of pride once again in our African-American heritage."

I feel Derek squeeze my hand, I breath shallow and painful breaths, but I breathe.  I realize that I am not done yet, that I am back home to The Homeplace and I am rewarded yet again.

Sarah Hoskins December 7, 2012

 

Sarah Hoskins is a documentary photographer, educator, and lecturer currently splitting her time between Chicago, Illinois and Lexington, Kentucky. Her photographs have been included in over 100 exhibitions and are in the permanent collections of The Smithsonian Institution, The Library of Congress, the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, and many others. Her work has been featured on NPR, in American Photography, American Legacy Magazine, Foto8, F8, Photo District News, South X Southeast, The Digital Journalist, and many others. She received her BA from Columbia College Chicago.

All photographs © Sarah Hoskins. 1. Creek baptism, 2012. 2. The Sisters after meeting, 2011. 3. Sunday morn, 2001. 4. Collection, 2004. 5. Chopping tobacco, 2005. 6. Hog in tub, 2002. 7. Pot pies, 2012. 8. Lodge meeting, 2005. 9. Satellite dish and slave cabin, 2010. 10. Walker family reunion, 2011. 11. Basketball, 2005. 12. The Benevolent Sisters, their 99th year, 2004. 13. Housing tobacco, 2005. 14. Rev. Raglin, Zion Hill Days, 2009. 15. Show me the way, 2011.

Review: New Deal Photographs of West Virginia, 1934-1943

Hardcover| 8 x 9.5 inches | 240 pages | 150 black and white photographs West Virginia University Press, 2012 | $29.99

Between 1934 and 1943, ten photographers: Elmer "Ted" Johnson, Walker Evans, Ben Shahn, Arthur Rothstein, Carl Mydans, Edwin Locke, Marion Post Wolcott, John Vachon, John Collier, Jr., and Arthur Siegel, visited West Virginia as part of Roy Stryker's Farm Security Administration (FSA) photographic unit. The FSA's primary attention during this time was on the northern and southern coalfields, the three subsistence homestead communities (Arthurdale, Eleanor, and Tygart Valley), and two wartime assignments in Nicholas and Mason counties.

What Rivard offers in this beautifully presented book, is a collection of images by photographers whose work I know well of West Virginia at a time I never knew. I'm fascinated with how others see my home state. None of these photographers are from West Virginia, yet they managed to capture its essence, its livelihood. Perhaps one of the things I appreciate most about these pictures is that they were made at a time when photographs weren't nearly as a prevalent as they are today (Instagram, Facebook and the like). Unlike the War on Poverty images of Appalachia, these pictures were made with a different intent. I sense a true collective effort to document the people and stories of West Virginia when I look at these photographs and think about the photographers who made them. Rivard notes that, "The photographs in this book offer professional fine art photographs in support of these memories, snapshots, and stories."

She continues:

"It is beyond the scope of this book to explore why, especially in the past fifty years, the state became a poster child for a culture of poverty. Unfortunately, the media have focused on poverty and exaggerated backwoods-type images as representative of West Virginia. These images have left terrible scars on a number of people who have grown up in the state. They also continue to bring harm through the perceptions that some outsiders have formed of the state and its citizens."

Rivard does a more than fair job of including images from a variety of the photographers as well as the regions covered. As a Mingo County native, I was somewhat disappointed to not see any photographs of Williamson or outlying areas included in the Southern Coalfields section, given Mingo's rich coal heritage and importance in the labor movement. But I admit my bias and am including an image (not in the book) by Ben Shahn made in Williamson in 1935. Logan and McDowell counties are well represented in pictures by Ben Shahn and Marion Post Wolcott.

New Deal Photographs of West Virginia is a brilliant book, extremely well edited and designed. The photographic reproductions are sharp and well printed and with every image, the Library of Congress negative file number is included, which makes finding them online incredibly easy. I can only hope for a second volume.

Betty Rivard is an award-winning fine art landscape photographer. She has researched and coordinated three exhibits of FSA photographs of West Virginia and contributed to articles about the FSA Project to Wonderful West Virginia, Goldenseal, and West Virginia South magazines. She is a Social Worker Emeritus and traveled to every county in West Virginia during her 25-year career as a social worker and planner with the state. Rivard's photography portfolio can be seen here.

Here are a few of my favorites from New Deal Photographs of West Virginia:

1. Wives of coal miners talking over the fence. Capels, West Virginia. Marion Post Wolcott. September 1938. LC-USF34-050260-E. 2. Miner (Russian). Capels, West Virginia. Marion Post Wolcott. September 1938. LC-USF33-030077-M1. 3. Men in Sunday clothes with miners' clubhouse in the background. Omar, West Virginia. Ben Shahn. October 1935. LC-USF33-006200-M1. 4. Coming home from school. Mining town. Osage, Scotts Run, West Virginia. Marion Post Wolcott. September 1938. LC-USF34-050352-E.

Very special thanks to Elaine McMillion, director of Hollow: An Interactive Documentary, for arranging a review copy of New Deal Photographs of West Virginia.