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Winner of the third biennial Center for Documentary
Studies/Honickman First Book Prize Robert Frank, Prize JudgeIn
Driftless, Danny Wilcox Frazier's dramatic black-and-white
photographs portray a changing Midwest of vanishing towns and
transformed landscapes. As rural economies fail, people, resources,
and services are migrating to the coasts and cities, as though the
heart of America were being emptied. Frazier's arresting
photographs take us into Iowa's abandoned places and illuminate the
lives of those people who stay behind and continue to live there:
young people at leisure, fishermen on the Mississippi, veterans on
Memorial Day, Amish women playing cards, as well as more recent
arrivals: Lubavitcher Hasidic Jews at prayer, Latinos at work in
the fields. Frazier's camera finds these newcomers while it also
captures activities that seemingly have gone on forever: harvesting
and hunting, celebrating and socializing, praying and surviving.
This collection of photographs is a portrait of contemporary rural
Iowa, but it is also more that that. It shows what is happening in
many rural and out-of-the-way communities all over the United
States, where people find ways to get by in the wake of closing
factories and the demise of family farms. Taken by a true insider
who has lived in Iowa his entire life, Frazier's photographs are
rich in emotion and give expression to the hopes and desires of the
people who remain, whose needs and wants are complicated by the
economic realities remaking rural America. Poetic and dark but
illuminated with flashes of insight, Frazier's stunning images
evoke the brilliance of Robert Frank's The Americans. To view an
image gallery, click here.
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