Brown's Guide to Georgia

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GEORGIA GALLERY

A panoramic view of the work of Georgia artists and photographers. The latest at Georgia art galleries. Plus, photo essays of Georgia tours, events, and outdoor recreation.

Archive for the ‘Photography’ Category

Foxfire Museum & Heritage Center

Sunday, February 28th, 2010
CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO VIEW THE FOXFIRE GALLERY OF 22 PHOTOGRAPHS

Over 40 years ago, a group of high school students took an interest in their mountain heritage and preserved a truly unique American culture by documenting it in The Foxfire Magazine and what has now become 12 volumes of books. The Foxfire Museum and Heritage Center continues to preserve, explain and celebrate that culture through demonstrations, self-guided tours of over 20 log structures, exhibits, annual events, a gift shop, and the continued publication of The Foxfire Magazine and books. View this gallery of photographs to learn more about Foxfire Museum and Heritage Center and the special way of life it celebrates. Read more about Foxfire in its detailed Foxfire profile and in a Foxfire feature in the Georgia Tours Blog.

Note that photographs of live demonstrations and costumed participants were taken during Foxfire’s two annual events, Living History Days and the Fall Heritage Festival, and do not represent ongoing features of the Museum and Heritage Center. Read more about Foxfire’s annual events.

Georgia’s Barrier Islands

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

Along the Georgia coast, 15 major barrier islands and many smaller islands are separated from the mainland from an extensive series of marshes and sounds. Unlike many of the developed barrier islands of the east coast,  the Georgia barrier islands still retain much of their natural wilderness. Approximately two-thirds of the islands are designated as parks, wildlife refuges, research reserves and heritage preserves with limited or no public access. This Photo Gallery shows photographs of Georgia’s 16 major barrier islands with brief descriptions and links to more detailed profiles of each island. To view the complete album CLICK ON THE IMAGE ABOVE.

Links:

  • View in conjunction with an INTERACTIVE MAP showing the locations of all of Georgia’s major barrier islands.

Tallulah River

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Photos of the upper Tallulah River and Tallulah River Gorge. To view the complete album of 10 photos, CLICK ON THE IMAGE.

View the photo gallery in conjunction with Suzanne Welander’s 10.7-mile Tallulah River Paddling Guide in two sections, the Coleman River Confluence to Plum Orchard Road (4.7 miles) and Tiger Creek Confluence to Tallulah Falls Lake (6 miles).

The Tallulah River is both a small stream of outstanding beauty and a dramatic whitewater run that pushes the limits of navigability. The headwaters are unbelievably clear, attracting avid anglers and occasional paddlers interested in technical Class II-III runs amid moss-covered boulders. At the other end of the river is the celebrated Tallulah Gorge, home to read-and-run whitewater from Class IV+ to Class V. In between these two extremes are four dams and very little navigable river.

South Fork Broad River

Monday, August 24th, 2009

 By MICHAEL MOODY

Roger Thomas and Michael Moody spent Wednesday, August 19th, on the South Fork Broad River taking photographs and recording GPS coordinates for an interactive map of Suzanne Welander’s canoeing guide to the stream. Here are the photographic results of their day’s work. CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO SEE THE ENTIRE GALLERY. Read Suzanne Welander’s South Fork Broad River paddling guide and view the INTERACTIVE MAP that includes these photographs along with the latitude and longitude coordinates.

Children of the Loom

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

 Text and Photo Caption Editing
By DANIEL M. ROPER

Editors Note: Thanks to Georgia BackRoads publisher Dan Roper for originally publishing these Lewis Wickes Hine photographs in the  Summer 2009 issue of Georgia BackRoads and for making them available to others on the Brown’s Guides website.

Some say that the end doesn’t justify the means, but you couldn’t have viewgallery240.jpgconvinced acclaimed photographer Lewis Wickes Hine (1874-1940). In  order to further a cause he held most dear, Hine cajoled, deceived and flat-out lied to persuade people to pose before his camera or to allow him onto their property so that he could take pictures. He had no reservations, whatsoever, about the means he used to achieve an end, but withhold your judgment of his actions until you read the rest of this article.

A century ago, Hine embarked on a mission to expose child labor in the United States by graphically portraying the exploitation of children as young as seven years old. These children, Hine and many others believed, should have been in school or at home playing with friends. Instead, they toiled in some of America’s most unwholesome work environments, including canneries, mines, quarries, and fisheries.

In the South, the cotton mills drew Hine’s attention. From Virginia to Alabama, thousands of children worked in textile mills that produced the fabric that clothed a nation. In Georgia, there were dozens of these cotton factories in cities and towns like Lafayette and Athens in the north, Columbus, Macon, and Augusta in central Georgia, and Tifton in the south. Note: Read a New York Times story written February 14, 1898, reporting that because of lower wages, longer hours and lower taxation, Massachusetts Cotton Mill was shifting more of its manufacturing from Lowell, Massachusetts, to the Lindale Mill in northwest Georgia’s Floyd County near Rome.

By 1910, one in four workers in the South’s textile mills was between the ages of 10 and 15 years. These youths received a few dollars a week for tasks ranging from running heavy machinery to monitoring the thread to guard against breaks. This was perfectly legal at the time, but Hine documented many instances of children as young as seven being employed. The youngest of these were usually “dinner toters” paid to carry meals to adult laborers. Schooling for any of the children who worked in the mills was irregular at best, or quite often non-existent.

Hine, who was born in Wisconsin and worked many years in New York, came to Georgia twice to document child labor in the state’s textile mills. His first visit took place in January 1909, and the second in April 1913. (A note on the dates on photographs in the Gallery: Sometimes Hine recorded the exact day on which a photograph was taken, but more often he recorded only the month and year. When an exact date was not specified, Brown’s Guides arbitrarily assigned it to the 15th of the month in which it was taken to satisfy the dating requuirements of the Gallery software). To gain entrance to the mills, he would arrive on the grounds dressed in suit and tie, posing as a Bible salesman, fire inspector, or as an industrial photographer making a record of factory machinery. When denied entry, he would linger by an entrance and photograph children as they arrived or departed.

Hine’s stratagems were usually successful, for he proved to be a prolific photographer and researcher. Of 65 reports issued by the National Child Labor Committee, he authored at least 30. He illustrated each report with scores of photographs bearing highly detailed notations right down to the ages and addresses of the children depicted.

His beautiful yet disquieting photographs brought home the humanity – and inhumanity – of child labor. Incongruously, some of his photographs show youngsters with dirty faces and bare feet, dressed in coveralls, while others feature children seemingly freshly scrubbed and wearing fine outfits. Since photography was still very much a novelty at the time, parents aware that their children were to be photographed undoubtedly dressed them for the occasion.

The undeniable beauty of Hine’s photographs and the dignity possessed by his subjects prompted some child-labor activists to complain. They felt Hine should have tried harder to exaggerate the poverty of the youngsters he portrayed.

Yet Hine was an effective and powerful opponent of child labor. He once told an audience, “Perhaps you are weary of child labor pictures. Well, so are the rest of us, but we propose to make you and the whole country so sick and tired of the whole business that when the time for action comes, child labor pictures will be records of the past.”

Thanks in no small part to Hine’s work, in 1916 Congress enacted the Keating-Owen Act that restricted employment of children under 14 in industry. “The work Hine did for this reform,” said the chairman of the National Child Labor Committee, “was more responsible than all other efforts in bringing the need to public attention.”

After finishing with child-labor work, Hine continued his social-advocacy photography. His later career included documenting poverty in the Balkans following World War I, drought and relief efforts in the Midwest during the Great Depression, and construction workers building the Empire State Building in New York City.

Despite his record of accomplishment, Hine found it difficult to earn an adequate living as a photographer. In January 1940, he lost his home to foreclosure. Ten months later, he died in extreme poverty in Dobbs Ferry, New York. His child labor photographs, though, remain a stirring memorial to his work, and all the more since they went so far to abolishing the practice.

Georgia Native American Sites

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

EMILY GÓMEZ, an assistant professor of art and photography at Georgia College and State University in Milledgeville, toured the South photographing the sites of former Native American villages, defensive fortifications and burial mounds. Here are some of her images of the Georgia locations.

viewgallery240.jpgArtist’s Statement
My large format photographic work documents Southeastern and Midwestern landscapes and what is missing from them—an American Indian presence.  Indian Mounds and former town sites fascinate me visually and in terms of what they symbolize. Simply put, they represent the achievements of people who no longer exist or whose populations have been decimated—people our predecessors killed or forced west to live on reservations.

My work is driven by my search to uncover the past—to find evidence of what was here before us and to educate others and myself about the history of our continent that we rarely learn. I feel that by unearthing the facts of our past and by admitting that what we did was wrong, we can begin to change the way we treat one another, both at home and abroad.

Bio
eimlywithcamea.jpgEmily J. Gómez is originally from Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.  She received her B.A. in Fine Arts/Photography from Loyola University Chicago in 1998 and her M.F.A. with Distinction from the University of Georgia in 2006. She is an adopted member of the Santee Indian Nation of South Carolina and an Assistant Professor of Art at Georgia College & State University in Milledgeville, Georgia. Photo by Ernesto Gómez.

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