Old School
I got my start in the photography world a while back, spending a decade photographing roadside memorials (usually crosses) along highways. I still watch for the memorials, but rarely stop to photograph them.
This one, though, needed to be photographed.
My photographer pal and I met up in New Mexico last month – we had less than 24 hours to shoot before he headed off to take a class at the Santa Fe Photographic Workshops, so we were busy. We were drawn the tiny town of Puerto de Luna, visiting it two times during our very brief adventure. On our one New Mexico morning, we were on a bridge over the Pecos River and saw this cross down below, just above the water. And it seemed to need us to look at it from a more intimate distance.
The top of the cross’s arm is engraved with “Old School” but we will never know why. Such is the mysterious way of roadside memorials – they are at one intensely personal and completely mysterious.
Puerto de Luna, New Mexico
photographed 3.25.2018
Posted on April 18, 2018, in Photography and tagged 365 photo project, black and white photography, learning to see, Leica, melinda green harvey, monochrome, new mexico, one day one image, photo a day, photography, postaday, puerto de luna, puerto de luna new mexico, roadside cross, roadside memorial, thoughtful seeing, travel photography. Bookmark the permalink. 2 Comments.
Love it and all the thoughts it brings to mind.
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Thanks, Richard. I worked on this shot for a while (until I lost the angle of the morning sun) to try to get it the way I imagined it could look…
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