This video showcases Danny Wilcox Frazier’s work documenting rural issues across the United States for the Facing Change: Documenting America (FCDA) project. FCDA is a non-profit collective of prominent photographers and writers who have come together to explore the United States during one of the most enduring times in the nation’s history.
Tag: Danny Wilcox Frazier
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A Conversation with Danny Wilcox Frazier on Facing Change: Documenting America
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VII Photo Adds Danny Wilcox Frazier and Sarker Protick | TIME
VII Photo Adds Danny Wilcox Frazier and Sarker Protick
The photo agency also chose a new CEO
via Time: http://time.com/3905072/vii-photo-danny-wilcox-frazier-sarker-protick/
The new additions expand the agency’s roaster to 20. In recent months, photographers Lynsey Addario and Stephanie Sinclair left VII.
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Scenes from the Iowa Freedom Summit – The New Yorker
Scenes from the Iowa Freedom Summit
Danny Wilcox Frazier captured Ted Cruz, Scott Walker, Chris Christie, and other possible Republican Presidential candidates at the summit in Des Moines.
via The New Yorker: http://www.newyorker.com/culture/photo-booth/scenes-iowa-freedom-summit
The photographer Danny Wilcox Frazier was there to capture the theatrics of the summit, which was hosted by the Iowa congressman Steve King and the nonprofit Citizens United, and included appearances by Sarah Palin and Donald Trump
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Danny Wilcox Frazier’s Ode to the American Heartland | PROOF
Danny Wilcox Frazier’s Ode to the American Heartland
“I get on the road and follow the photography … wherever I end up is where I’m supposed to be. I love living like that.”—Danny Wilcox Frazier Wanderlust and a keen sense of wanting to make a difference: practical prerequisites for anyone dedicating their
via Photography: http://proof.nationalgeographic.com/2014/11/21/danny-wilcox-fraziers-ode-to-the-american-heartland/
get on the road and follow the photography … wherever I end up is where I’m supposed to be. I love living like that.”—Danny Wilcox Frazier
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danny wilcox frazier – lost nation: america’s rural ghetto
Danny Wilcox Frazier – Lost Nation: America’s Rural Ghetto
Danny Wilcox Frazier Lost Nation: America’s Rural Ghetto [ EPF 2012 FINALIST ] For ten years now, I have photographed throughout the Midwest, the agricultural and industrial heart of America.…
Rural America has lost over twelve million people since 2000, with the latest figure putting its share of the nation’s population at just 16 percent, the lowest in history in 1910, that figure was 72 percent. My photographs document those fighting to continue living in these forgotten communities, the individuals working to maintain traditions that symbolize rural life. Swaths of the Great Plains, Midwest, and Appalachia, as well as numerous Southern states are in the greatest danger. Many towns in these regions are likely already lost, and my work will simply document these communities before they fade away.
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danny wilcox frazier – detroit | burn magazine
danny wilcox frazier – detroit
[slidepress gallery=’dannywilcoxfrazier_detroit’] Hover over the image for navigation and full screen controls ESSAY CONTAINS EXPLICIT CONTENT Danny Wilcox Frazier A Detroit Requiem pla…
via burn magazine: http://www.burnmagazine.org/essays/2010/12/danny-wilcox-frazier-detroit/
While I was in Detroit, 17-year-old Chaise Sherrors was shot and killed while giving a haircut on a porch. We met his mother, Britta McNeal. Britta was broken, often lost in memory while her eyes filled and sometimes tears flowed. From her porch, she stared across the street that ran in front of her humble one-story on the East Side. She stared at a half-burnt skeleton of a house, gutted inside and out, and a constant reminder of her misery. Britta’s grandson played in broken glass and garbage that littered the driveway of the abandoned house next door. Gang graffiti added the only touch of color to the black and gray left behind by a fire. Britta showed us the urn containing the remains of her 14-year-old son, De’Erion. He too was shot on Detroit’s East Side, killed a year before his older brother. After Chaise’s funeral, Britta will have two urns to decorate her mantel.
“I know society looks at a person like me and wants me to go away,” Britta said. “‘Go ahead, walk in the Detroit River and disappear.’ But I can’t. I’m alive. I need help. But when you call for help, it seems like no one’s there.”
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Driftless: Stories from Iowa by Danny Wilcox Frazier
MediaStorm says:
Life in Iowa can be punishing. Many Iowans expend their lives sweating over soil and spilling the blood of livestock; they endure the hardships associated with a life inextricably bound to the ups and downs of nature. Today, those challenges and a shift in our nation’s economy have pushed the youth of rural communities to migrate to the metropolises of America. Those left in the wake of this out-migration continue their lives, seemingly unchanged from the generations that preceded them, and entombed in obscurity.
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SHANE LAVALETTE / JOURNAL » Blog Archive » Danny Wilcox Frazier: Driftless
Driftless: Photographs from Iowa (Duke University Press, 2007) by Danny Wilcox Frazier came out with Frank’s words of praise as the forward to the book.
I stumbled across a copy of it a few weeks ago in the Harvard Book Store and was drawn to the images before I read anything about Frank’s role in making them known. Frazier’s decision to consider the effects of people and resources migrating from failing rural economies to the coasts and to cities was very interesting in itself but the images made the topic all the more severe. It is “as though the heart of America were being emptied.”
Check it out here.