Wednesday, April 23, 2014

I made this photograph in 2004.  I was driving to the Kingsley Plantation, and was startled to see a road like this that just isn't the kind of scene one finds in the northeast.  I had my 4x5 kit with me that day, and the negative is rich in detail and tonal gradations (as only a large format film negative can be, and digital files simply can't.).  It's strikingly similar to the photograph I posted a week ago of the arbored path at Washington Oaks State Park.  The road to Kingsley, however, never looked like this when the plantation was under active cultivation.  All these acres were cleared and planted.  The lush, abundant flora has taken over in the interval since.


3 comments:

dvoss said...

With respect to the sad history of the road and plantation, I love the beauty of trees and their branches. Beauty seems to be reclaiming, what was once a place, permeated by the immoral bondage of slavery.

John Voss said...

It is beautiful...and haunted by the spirits of the enslaved who lived and died here. Slavery in other parts of the world was based on conquest and as a system of labor. In this country, it was race based. As much as I despised the south for maintaining the institution, it was also an active part of northern labor until gradually abolished well into the 19th century. No one in this country gets off without responsibility. Thanks for looking.

dvoss said...

I lived and worked in Kensington for a long time. I witnessed the abandoned, factory culture neighborhood, dying out as jobs were outsourced. The people were not moving on. I started a video documentary in the early 80's but found it difficult to continue. Jeffrey Stockbridge has been doing work that captures the essence of the people and the despair. You may want to take a look. http://kensingtonblues.com