Blog Archives

another shopping opportunity

 

There are a lot of chances to stop and spend your tourism dollars along Route 66, particularly in Arizona. I mean, who doesn’t look forward to take care of their need for more kachinas AND additional cigars in one convenient location? Although, thematically, I am not sure how cigars got in the mix, but whatever. (From the collaborative Route 66 project, with VC Torneden, The Other Side.)

As a reminder, you can see more of this collaborative project on Facebook, Instagram, and on our website.

And The Other Side will be on exhibit at Living Arts of Tulsa beginning April 5.

along Route 66
Lupton, Arizona
photographed 5.30.2023

selfie/stick

 

Why? Why do people DO THIS? (From The Other Side, a collaborative photography project capturing images from Route 66.)

As a reminder, you can see more of this collaborative project, with VC Torneden, at Facebook, Instagram, and on our website.

And The Other Side will be on exhibit at Living Arts of Tulsa beginning April 5.

along Route 66
Los Angeles, California
photographed 6.3.2023

neighborhood, with dirty windows

This was the view from my hotel room in Needles, California. And while I don’t want to imply that the whole town looked like this, this scene is…not out of character with other things I observed and/or photographed.

As a reminder, you can see more of this collaborative project, with VC Torneden, at Facebook, Instagram, and on our website.

And The Other Side will be on exhibit at Living Arts of Tulsa beginning April 5.

along Route 66
Needles, California
photographed 6.1.2023

spiderman

In the summer of 2021, I was having an Instagram conversation with another photographer, VC Torneden, whom I’d been following for a while. During the conversation, she asked me if I’d like to collaborate with her on a project she held dear – documentation of Route 66. I said yes immediately. At that point the idea was that we’d photograph the route through Texas and Oklahoma. Later (but not much later, actually) that expanded to shooting the entire Chicago-to-Santa Monica route. And then the project found a name – The Other Side – and a whole adventure was born.

Route 66 has been photographed many times over the decades. However, we were interested in taking a deeper look, concentrated on the chronically overlooked miles by predominantly bypassing the tourist attractions and instead seeking to find – and document – the quotidian, the overlooked, the forgotten along America’s highway: the other side of the road.

And now we are happy to announce that Living Arts of Tulsa will host an exhibit of 222 photos from our project. The show will be up from April 1-22, with an official opening on Friday, April 5. If you’re in the area, we’d love for you to stop by and see the show.

In the meantime, we’ve got starts of a Facebook page, an Instagram account, and a website.

As you can imagine, we've been pretty busy getting ready for the show, so the social media things haven't yet gotten the attention they need – but we’ll get there. But please, if you're interested in seeing more of our work and learning about our project, please follow along on any of the options.

along Route 66
Wilmington, Illinois
photographed 7.1.2022

g

Truxton is a one-letter sort of town. And that one letter is G.

Now you know.

Route 66 – Truxton, Arizona
photographed 6.1.2023