Even more than 2013, I spent 2014 working on projects, including the films Almost There and The Area, and photography series about subsidized housing in New York City and Japan’s Tōhoku region. When not working on those projects, I continued to travel through the United States, often to work on my ongoing collaboration with Michael Carriere at the Milwaukee School of Engineering. Below, I have included sample photographs from those projects, alongside supplementary images I made in many of the cities I visited throughout the year. As always, you can click through most of the photographs to view them on flickr, alongside many other everyday images.
PROJECTS
Almost There
In 2013, I produced a body of work as Environmental Cinematographer for the ITVS/Kartemquin Films project Almost There. After a year of post-production work, the film made its world premiere at DOCNYC in November. It has since screened at ArcLight Hollywood, and its Chicago premiere will be on January 10, 2015 at the Gene Siskel Film Center. Watch for it on PBS later this year.
The Area
I continue to busily work on The Area, alongside editors Brian Ashby and Peter Galassi from Scrappers Film Group. Thanks to the support from the Graham Foundation, the Driehaus Foundation, and the City of Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, we produced more than three hours of edited footage last summer and are preparing for another round of editing early in 2015. Still, I am not done with the project and expect to be filming into 2015. If you are interested in reading about the project, I continue to write a column addressing some of the pertinent issues for BAG News. My next piece will be published in the next few weeks, although you can always check in at the film’s website for updates.
The Subsidized Housing of New York City, New York
This fall I worked on a documentary photography project about subsidized housing in New York that included everything from historic cooperative developments to the public housing projects of the New York City Housing Authority. I will provide more details about that series when it is published as part of a book project next year. In the meantime, I’ve included two images below.
Japan
At the beginning of 2014 I flew to Japan for an exhibition of the Isolated Building Studies at Gallery Tanto Tempo, which led to the publication of Isolated Building Studies by UTAKATADO Publishing. Following my time in Kobe, I visited other cities before heading into Tōhoku, the Japanese region critically affected by the March 11, 2011 earthquake, tsunami, and subsequent nuclear disaster. Several photographs from the visit are below, and I wrote a lengthy summary of the experience last January.
OTHER UNITED STATES CITIES
Bay Area, California
Buffalo, New York
In 2013, I created a small project about Buffalo’s telescope houses, and I continued to work on the project in 2014. The following set of night photographs is a sample of the material I made to extend the earlier work.
Cambridge, Massachusetts
While I have been mainly using my time in Cambridge to write, I have been working on a small project about the neighborhood of Cambridgeport.
Chicago, Illinois
In addition to working on The Area and a set of photographs from this year’s polar vortex, I continue to work on a broad body of work about Chicago, from general views of daily urban life to documenting specific events like the Luftwerk/Mas Context installation at Marina City.
Cleveland, Ohio
I am working on a typology of post-war residential buildings in the Cleveland area.
Detroit, Michigan
Although I have slowed working on my seven-year project about the Detroit, Michigan area, I still made a few trips to the city.
Los Angeles, California
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Minneapolis, Minnesota
New York City, New York
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and its River Towns
I was happy to have enough time in the Pittsburgh area to produce a small project along the Monongahela and Ohio Rivers.
Providence, Rhode Island
St. Louis, Missouri
I was only in St. Louis for a couple of days, but I was excited to be able to snap this aerial image of Granite City, Illinois.
To 2015!
Howdy David,
Thanks for the encyclopedic summary of 2014. Am working my may through it, clicking each link. You obviously are finding every occasion to photograph in the snow: Buffalo and Cleveland. Those brick houses in Cleveland must be in the 650 to 750
sqft range. Have photographed a good number of wood ones in Houston, Many deserted, so I could get inside, before they were demolished. Not only are the lives of those who lived there often revealed, but the sadness of the building(s) can be felt as they sag, mold, and cringe from the pain of those who spray paint and trash their guts.
Where in NYC was the 1st photograph of subsidized housing taken? Is it as liveable as a whole, as the photo gives the impression of its being?
I take it you are familiar with Andrew Borowiec’s books: “Along the Ohio,” and “Cleveland: The Flats, The Mill, and the Hills.”
Warm in the 80’s in Houston. Out all day photographing. Been following the building of a Buddhist Temple, and preps are on-
going for Asian New Year. Also, believe I found a home for an 1912 Victorian home in excellent shape. Trying to save it from being demolished to make way for high-end apartments. City of Houston saves nothing; everything now built for just 20 years.
It is free, but moving it is $100, 000 to $125,000. Would sell for approx $700,000.
Regards,
Bob
ps: In the next few days will get back to your long sitting email asking about photographs of the project on gentrification in the
Washington Avenue Corridor, Houston, TX.