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Half a Tank: I HAD to share this ..

Yolanda Vazquez walks with her six-year-old son Jonathan down the hallway of the
Hilda M. Barg Homeless Prevention Center. Photo by Michael Williamson/The Washington Post

This is the kind of link I would normally share on my tumbleblog. Especially since it's a series that ended over a year ago. But I just randomly happened across it. I couldn't believe I missed it in the first place. I haven't even had a chance to get into it and experience it for myself. But I decided to share it right away. It's the kind of work I get excited about because it combines topics and interests I've always been drawn to.

The subject of this post is a series, done in the form of a blog, by two Washington Post staffers, writer Theresa Vargas and photographer Michael Williamson. The series, called Half a Tank: Along Recession Road, was a 5-month long quest to find photographs and stories about the lives of ordinary folks and how the current economic recession has altered their lives. The project ended in October of 2009, but it's still available for viewing.

I can't say I'm familiar with Ms. Vargas' work, but I'm acutely aware of Williamson's. I seem to always be just a step behind Michael Williamson. Or he behind me. He briefly left the newspaper business to teach photojournalism at Western Kentucky University – my Alma Mater – just a couple of years after I left. And he joined the staff at the Washington Post when I was still working in that metro area – shortly before I moved to Georgia.

I've never met the man but I've always been strongly drawn to his work, which can have a sort of dark, Americana feel to it. A feel that harkens back to the days when Life magazine was the chief window to the world. And, like myself, the guy has an affinity for the road. Getting out of the nation's megopolis, off the interstates. That's where you'll find America and its history. Williamson has driven countless miles. Hopped trains with hobos. He's probably hoofed more miles than many of us have driven.

I'm also keen on history and the power of photography to document and preserve visual records of people and eras for all time. Williamson has literally traveled in the footsteps of iconic photographer Walker Evans, who, with writer James Agee, produced the book Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, which depicted the lives of sharecroppers in the South during the Great Depression. Fifty years later, working with writer Dale Maharidge, Williamson chronicled the descendants of those portrayed in Evans' work. The resulting book, And Their Children After Them, won a Pulitzer Prize for non-fiction in 1990.

While following in Evans' tracks and sharing with him a fondness for photographing the details of cultures and places, I think, personally, Williamson's work often resembles, in both in style and intent, that of Robert Frank, who's momentous book The Americans was critically panned when first published. The pictures of both photographers are unsentimental in their blunt and sometimes brutal honesty in their depiction of America – especially the poor, the downtrodden, and the homeless. But they are pictures clearly made by the mind and soul of an artist. Evidence of the American Dream are everywhere in Williamson's work, but his images powerfully remind us, sometimes uncomfortably so, that there's still plenty of work to be done in this great democratic experiment of ours. While Robert Frank's view of the American Dream was that of an outsider due to his immigrant status, Williamson's is due to his upbringing.

It's natural that Williamson would be drawn to the road and to downtrodden subjects. He grew up in foster homes and orphanages in over 15 states.  His brings his own experiences to his work and gives these people a voice through his photographs. It's important and notable work. Photojournalism at its very best.

A self portrait Michael made in North Dakota.
Photo by Michael Williamson/The Washington Post

Please make some time to view Half a Tank: Along Recession Road. One caveat, though. The blog reads from the end to the beginning as each blog post replaces the one before it. I wish the Post would re-format the piece so it is easier to experience it chronologically, as if we were traveling with the two journalists.

Still, it will be worth the effort. Maybe I'll finally meet Michael Williamson, one day. Until then, we're all privileged to experience his journeys and historic chronicles through his eyes.






Update (Nov.19):Michael Williamson's latest project, From middle class to poverty, wasjust posted on the WashingtonPost website

Thursday, November 18, 2010 | posted in , | 0 comments [ More ]

Shots that make you go Hmmmmm ...

Mercer's Sharnea Boykin, left, gets the worse of a collision with Georgia Southern
guard Jamie Navarro during the second half of Tuesday's game at Hanner Fieldhouse.

Okay. I love shooting sports, and I'm fairly competent at it. Now, I'm not Bill FrakesWalter IoossJohn Beiver good. That's crazy good. Those guys just never seem to miss anything, while I still have plenty of times where I never seem to be in the right place at the right time. Especially this year – my gear seems to draw referees like flies. I just can't begin to tell you how many great moments I've captured that are hidden behind black and white stripes. But every once in a while, I can still pull off a doozy.

And I almost didn't get this one because I was contemplating leaving early with the Lady Eagles comfortably ahead by 20+ points in the second half. I did leave, though, after I checked my images while Jamie Navarro shot her free throws. I blew the smoke off the barrel of my lens and got the hell out of Dodge.

This is the beauty of still photography, too. Video would have captured a nasty collision in real time. Sometimes, slow motion can convey something we miss in real time, but it is also fleeting and linear. Only still images can communicate the merging of elements that create something unusual, surprising, and memorable.

Anticipation plays an incredibly important role in photography. It's what separates the best from everyone else. Some things, however, you just can't anticipate, and you look forward to the surprises. You never get tired of that.

Ask anyone who's been doing this for a long time what the best part of the job still is, and they'll probably tell you – it's those shots that make you go hmmmmm.




Tuesday, November 16, 2010 | posted in , , | 0 comments [ More ]

GSU win trumps all



My wife called it.
With the Georgia Southern football team seemingly out of the playoff hunt with four losses, there were lots of story lines that might have produced a front page picture.
Homecoming. The annual Blue-Out, where most folks dress out in team colors and some paint their bodies from head to toe. Being the last home game of the season, the senior football players were honored. Not to mention the nippy fall weather that had folks huddling together in their coats and blankets.
No shortage of possibilities for a front page photograph.
While alumni were out in full force, the visual presence of Homecoming wasn't so apparent, and I mentioned that to my wife before we both went about our busy work days. And, being the loyal Georgia Southern fan she is, she quipped "When the Eagles beat App State, then you'll have a front page picture!"
I smiled. Georgia Southern has struggled to return to the heights of their glory since their last Football Championship Series (FCS, formerly Division 1-AA) Championship in 2001, their sixth title overall. Since that time, they have watched Appalachian State become a perennial powerhouse and championship contender, winning three straight titles of their own from 2005-2007. Today, the Mountaineers were the number one ranked team in the country and the Eagles were supposed to be a minor speed bump on the way to another championship run.
So I went about finding a way to tell the stories of the day surrounding the game as App State raced to a 14-0 lead.
But the Eagles refused to act like a speed bump. With the Mountaineers threatening to take a 21-0 lead in the second quarter, they came up with an interception in the end zone. Then they scored with only seconds to go before the half. Then they came out after the break, marched down the field, and scored again. 14-all.
The rest of the second half was a slugfest in which the defenses dominated. Regulation ended with the game still tied up at 14. The Eagles scored a touchdown on their first possession in overtime. Then they forced a fumble by the Mountaineers quarterback and recovered it. Game over. Stadium erupts in celebration. Got my front page picture.
Good call, my love!



Georgia Southern fullback Robert Brown (5), center right, celebrates a four-yard touchdown in overtime against number-one ranked (FCS) Appalachian State at Paulson Stadium in Statesboro, Ga.  Saturday.

Saturday, November 6, 2010 | posted in , , | 1 comments [ More ]

Tip: Learn from your mistakes? Hah! Why not learn from a Pro's instead?


I've mentioned Joe McNally in another post: The best light available – in a flash.

Joe's been around the block. He was, in fact, Life magazine's last staff photographer. Photojournalist. Portraitist. Editorial, commercial, advertising photographer. If you want to learn about lighting, he is one of the pre-eminant sources for information and advice. His workshops are renowned around the world. Joe is also a fantastic, self-depricating, witty writer who's penned several books and writes a widely-read blog.

I've been getting a lot of questions lately about photography – what equipment to buy and advice about making better pictures. Today, Joe beat me to the punch. In his post, he says:

"My buds over at LIFE.com asked me to come up with a list of common mistakes folks make when starting out with a camera in their hands. Okay. No shortage of material here, right? And they came to the right source, ’cause I’ve made every mistake, basic and advanced, that one could possibly think of. Hell, I’ve even invented some mistakes."

Hence, Joe combined some historic photos from Life's archive with some sagely advice.

So, if you want some tips about what mistakes not to make and shoot better pictures, let experience be your teacher and and learn (and laugh) with a master:


Tuesday, November 2, 2010 | posted in | 0 comments [ More ]

Reader submissions enabled on a small(er) voice



Following up on the announcement of my supplemental blog, a small(er) voice, I enabled the ability for readers to submit their own content to encourage discussion.

Got a link to a web page you want to share? A quote? A picture or slideshow you think is a great example of news photography or photojournalism? A video you think deserves some conversation?

Please feel free to click on the "Conversation" link and submit your content for posting. While the focus of this blog is photojournalism, conversation about journalism in general and current events is also encouraged, although some discretion will be exercised.

Your content could be the subject of a post here on a small voice, too. While comments for all posts will be allowed to be made anonymously, the sharing of links must include the attribution of both the sharer and the source of the content. All submission are subject to approval before posting.

So, folks, contribute and share away!


Monday, November 1, 2010 | posted in , , | 0 comments [ More ]

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