They're great pictures, well done-
A bit different to the pictures of the last great depression,
but just as alarming in their own way...
joseph
They're great pictures, well done-
A bit different to the pictures of the last great depression,
but just as alarming in their own way...
joseph
good stuff!
Excellent work. I grew up in Cleveland, and I remember Randall Park Mall as being the largest shopping mall in the area back in the 80s. I had no idea it had closed. My parents had a jewelry store in Beachwood Place mall, and I developed a lifelong allergy to shopping malls.
How did you get access to light these places?
I am endlessly fascinated with Malls, American mega-trends, ghost stores, and suburban mall-centrism. So, this is just a fantastic work. I will certainly share it with my mates who have the same strange passion! Thanks for sharing!
Denver has a large collection of dead-malls, but Cinderella City as a phenomenon, an era, and a source of fascination in its after life for all of us. Now it is gone, and the City of Englewood sits in its place. But we will always remember...
Facinating...
Thanks. The photos are great. It's always my view that photographs that last the longest (over time) are ordinary scenes of the times, simply picture of the everyday life around us. It's always the lasting legacy we can give the future about who we are.
--Scott--
Scott M. Knowles, MS-Geography
scott@wsrphoto.com
"All things merge into one, and a river flows through it."
- Norman MacLean
This is just a small edit of the project which is ongoing. David, Randall Park is actually still 'open'. The Sears was up and running as was the Burlington Coat Factory and perhaps the movie theater. I took that picture around Thanksgiving last year and it was getting very quiet. The interiors are just available light. When it's real dark outside I might paint over the long exposures w/flashlights or a Unity light (police style lamp).
Matt, hope to make it Denver to do some photographing soon. Always been in love with the work of Robert Adams from there.
Really interesting work. Minds me of the work done during the Great Depression and work of European store fronts damaged after the war.
I understand there are whole small town "main streets" that are abandon as well. I hope someone is out there photographing. It would be great to gather these into a show one day.
Keep exploring.
haunting work, so familiar and unexpected
Congratulations also for the Robert Koch Gallery show.
It's excellent work Brian.
& One of my chief concerns,I have been troubled by the sprawl we see here in Maryland. Maryland was once a beautiful state, because of its location related to Washington I fear my native State will someday be nothing but concrete.
Part of our problem in this country is allowing unrestrained building. Everyone flees the Metro areas and they become somewhere else. It would be nice if our economy was based on maximizing potential instead of squandering it by always building more retail space and Mc Mansions.
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