Jul
15

A Vanishing America Told in Pictures

By admin

 

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All across America, a familiar type of landscape can be found: empty buildings, decaying storefronts and deserted streets. They’re not ghost towns, but rather the remnants of a different time. Main streets which were once booming centers of commerce are now often populated with the imagined ghosts of a time when super-stores and corporate chains were still on the far horizon.

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Michael Eastman documented these landscapes in his series “Vanishing America,” flawlessly capturing the faded colors and rough surfaces of these obsolete buildings and ignored spaces. His travels throughout America consumed more than three years and took the photographer through 40 states as he looked for more and more examples of compelling age-worn textures. WebUrbanist recently had the pleasure of talking with Michael about his richly layered project.

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Michael Eastman: I have always been drawn to urban surfaces since I began in 1972. I am mostly a colorist and I believe that abstractions with some narrative content are the most interest to me. The patina, color and surfaces are what I have always found fascinating.  I travel in search of things of interest for me to photograph. I try to have no expectations, no agenda and let the landscape unfold as I explore.

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Michael Eastman: I believe that photographs, regardless of their intent, eventually become of more interest as a record of history. What photographers record becomes more interesting to future viewers for what it says about the past than whatever the reason the photographer had intended when making a photograph from an artistic viewpoint.

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Michael Eastman: Over the last several decades, I am continually struck by the discovering that buildings that I had once photographed now no longer exist. It became clear to me that the America that I grew up with was rapidly disappearing. I felt it was important to continue to photograph these places and I began to feel a sense of urgency that I did not feel before. Things were changing much faster than I had imagined. And the surfaces and facades that told stories were vanishing.

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Michael Eastman: I think I have said what I had to say with this series. There are other places that I feel are also disappearing and should be recorded. I have made several trips to Cuba over the last decade and I feel that someday soon things will change there dramatically. It needed to be recorded and the architecture, color and surfaces are so beautiful. And I am also planning a trip to the far east with the same intent.

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Michael Eastman: It is our history. These everyday monuments are our ruins; they are our past. They represent who we are and where we came from and this past needs to be part of our future.

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From houses to old businesses to entire rows of storefronts, the subjects of Eastman’s photographs are carefully and lovingly explored. Color is a major factor in each of the shots, with the impeccable compositions being the next most noticeable element. The rich textures and vivid detail create a longing to be a part of the nostalgic scenes. There is something here to stir the emotions – and the memories – of anyone who grew up in America prior to the 1990s. These pictures are, indeed, the records of our past. They are relics of an America that we are not likely to ever see again.

Categories : Discovery, nature, photos

6 Comments

1

Vanishing America? Le Happy is a bustling crepe shop in the heart of an old part of Portland. Nowhere near abandonment or sadness.

Nice pictures, though.

2

C’Mon, Tim E! All they’re supposed to be is “nice pictures.” All that Vanishing America wooga-wooga pseudo-academic crap is just the artist being pretentious in explaining how the art appreciation classes at the community college can expand a vocabulary and how these “nice pictures” are much deeper and moodier than any other “nice pictures” because of it.

But they are pretty cool.

3

funny… i took “vanishing america” to mean places that wouldnt be around for very much longer…. some sooner than others…. but in the scheme of things… are not being created anymore… and how regulation, new construction techniques and permitting requirements, make these scenes that wont be there in the very near future….. if that crepe shop is “bustling” as you say, eventually they will outgrow that edifice and will seek larger more “up to date” and befitting of a successful enterprise. so… dave..tim… STFU. why do you need to denigrate the individual who photographed and memorilized something he felt was vanishing?… you two are turds

4

I wonder whether there’s something in the human psyche that craves homogenization and above all – knowing what to expect. We must crave those things, (and low, low prices) more than true Americana and small business… and look where it’s brought us — many or most Americans working for large firms or not working. Most large firms having hierarchical structures and authoritarian “leadership” with slogans and propaganda which would make Stalin blush in his bloomers.

5

WTF!?!

Vanishing America wooga-wooga pseudo-academic crap, outgrow that edifice, hierarchical structures and authoritarian “leadership”, I see that you guy’s were paying attention in 8th grade, bully for you!

I will be seeing all of you putzes very soon!

Satan

6

Le Happy has been there FOREVER; it is a food destination that certainly owes part of it’s charm to its little building and has no intention of moving or getting larger and more “up to date and befitting of a successful enterprise” nestled in an industrial (though they could go for another location on the west side). Not every restaurant wants to end up looking like Denny’s.
But yeah, they don’t make buildings like that anymore. All the new buildings look like crap and don’t have this early 40s look that is slowly being bulldozed and replaced with boxy condos all over Portland.

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