In the southwestern part of the state, change is also at work in the diversity of the population, as Warren County has become home to refugees from other parts of the world. According to WKYU, the Public Radio Service of Western Kentucky University, “Bowling Green is the sixth largest area for refugee resettlement in the nation, with communities of refugees from parts of Africa, the Balkans, and Southeast Asia.” Thus we see the wary face of a mother with two young children acclimating to a new community. The ease and acceptance of the native-born Bluegrass State residents is missing here.
To accomplish the project before the end of 2020 may feel akin to Sisyphus moving that stone uphill, and there is irony in the fact that, in a time when more people than ever can collect pictures on the ubiquitous mobile devices that are a social anchor, that goal should be so difficult.
It underscores that a good photographer is more than a technician; they bring a discerning eye and discriminating sensibility to the task, the outsider’s perspective that is removed from the hermetic community culture. The Kentucky Documentary Photographic Project has recruited a team of photographers that represent a range of experience and points of view, drawing fresh and revelatory images from a Commonwealth built on deep-rooted traditions. Currently there is work from Ross Gordon, Sarah Lyon, Zed Saeed, Alyssa Schukar, Brittany Greeson, Rachel Boillot, Harrison Hill, Bob Hower, and Ted Wathen.
“Looking At Kentucky Anew…The Kentucky Documentary Photographic Project”: A Louisville Visual Art /2019 Louisville Photo Biennial Exhibit at Metro Hall
Runs through February, 2020
Bob Hower and Ted Wathen will host a gallery talk for the exhibit 12-1 pm on Friday, December 13 in the Mayor’s Gallery at Metro Hall, 527 West Jefferson Street.
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