Today's blog is a re-post of one I wrote on February 7th, 2020.
I began photographing in 1968 and for more than 25 years
photographed anything and everything that I thought might make an interesting
picture. My commercial work was moderately successful; my editorial and
documentary work somewhat more so. But there was no organizing principle to my
work because I did not know who I was as a photographer. I had not found my
"voice."
One thing that always puzzled me was that I felt drawn to
photograph old structures. In the early 1970s, on a trip to visit my parents
in the sparsely settled hill country of southern Indiana, I spent a day driving around
and photographing the homes of people I had known in my youth. Many were
abandoned; some even falling down. I told my wife later that I didn't know why
I was drawn to do that -- I certainly would never make a dime from it!
Surprisingly, though, I eventually did. In 1994, I was
commissioned by Rock City Gardens
of Lookout Mountain, Georgia,
to find and photograph every one of the still-standing barns that had been
painted with the white on black "See Rock City" message. Using their barn-painting
crew's old records from the 1960s, I drove more than 35,000 miles over an 18-month period, as I could steal time away from my studio, visited more than 500 sites in 15 states, and photographed the more than 250 barns still in existence.
Rock City Barns: A Passing
Era was published
in 1996 and became an instant best-seller. Sometime later I received a letter from the well-known art photographer Maria von
Matteson, who proposed arranging a joint exhibit with her and the great Florida
Everglades photographer Clyde Butcher.
The show never happened, but one thing that Maria
said to me stuck: she said "You need to write an artist's statement that
defines you." So I did, and this is what I came up with.
My domain is the old, the odd, and the ordinary; the beautiful,
the abandoned, and the about to vanish away. I am a visual historian of an
earlier America
and a recorder of the interface between man and nature; a keeper of vanishing
ways of life.
As a commercial, architectural, and occasional wedding
photographer, I've done a lot of things that don't fit within that statement.
Yet, for the past 24 years I've known who I am as a photographer and have
sought to work as much as possible within that vein. How well I've succeeded will be for others to judge, but I
know who I am and what I want to do for as long as I am able.
Visit my online storefront at https://davejenkins.pixels.com/ to see a selection of my photographs for sale.
The second edition of my book, Backroads and Byways of Georgia, originally scheduled for December, will be released in June, 2023.
Photograph and text copyright 2022 David B.Jenkins.
I post Monday, Wednesday, and Friday unless life gets in the way.
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