ABOUT
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

JGR_LeicaR3_08_21_2015_12_.jpgThe photographer William Eggleston has famously made a career out of democratizing photography. He calls it photographing the ordinary. We know him for his color photographs of Memphis, TN - fields, roads, tricycles, parking lots, homes, churches, funerals, people, trash bins, store fronts, cars, gas stations, light poles, and dolls, the list goes on and on. But if you have ever lived in the south, you will recognize this world. It’s a place and a time, similar to others in America, but still somehow different. That’s the mark of a good photographer, something that makes you recognize a style, something that makes you want to say “That looks like an Eggleston.”

But today, in the digital age, the democratization of photography has balkanized the photograph. Is there any fragment of reality too small to photograph? Is any fragment better than any other? Is my photographic moment more important than yours? Today we flickr, instagram, facebook, and twitter our photos, as if to say, “Hey, look at this, this is a moment of my life.” Never mind how many billions of photographs will be taken this year. Never mind how transient and small the moment may be. And with billions of photographs, can anyone develop a style?

JGR_LeicaR3_08_21_2015_13_.jpgAnd yet…and yet… people want to take photographs more than ever. Technology drives the desire, and makes it easy to snap the photo. Who doesn’t take photographs? For the amateur, the biggest problem is what to do with them.  In the past, we pasted them into albums, and passed the albums around.  Today, we put them on ipads and pass the ipads around. But still, there are so many of them. And how do you pass the ipad around to everyone? And what do you do with the rest? And, just as important, do people really want to look at your photos?

As an amateur, you accumulate lots of different photos – people, scenery, family events. Notice that I didn’t say portraits, landscapes, and weddings. You don’t accidently accumulate portraits, landscapes, and wedding albums. You have to shoot those intentionally. Amatuers mostly take aspirational snapshots. Their defining quality is documentation.  I want this photo of the birthday party because it’s part of our family history. In years to come, it might give us a moment of pleasure to look back and remember this day. So you snap the picture.
JGR_LeicaR3_08_31_2015_45_.jpg
But sometimes you think the picture is a little better than a snapshot. You know you’re never going to be a professional, but something inside says, “I really like this picture, and I want to make an even better one.”  Is there room in life for the middling amateur? Are there any more Egglestons out there wandering the landscape, just shooting what interests them?

Hence, a blog.  It's a place in no man’s land, somewhere between snapshots and something worth a second look. So here goes. I shoot what interests me. Simple as that. A lot of it goes in the trash. You’ll never see it. But some of it I keep and some of it will end up here. The current stuff is better than the old stuff, but there’s a lot of old stuff. So some old and some new, until the old archive is exhausted and all is new.

October, 2017

Photos were taken along the Blue Ridge Parkway on Portra 160 with a Leica R3 and a 50mm summicron R.

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It takes about a week. First, the ramps and fences go up. Then the bundles of folding chairs appear. The stage and video screens go up next. Finally, the chairs open in ordered rows. Security personel ...
The Corner is a quarter mile of swag shops, greasy spoons, restaurants, and convenience stores along University Ave., roughly from about Chancellor street to the 14th street railroad bridge ...
State and local officials prepared for the one year anniversary of the Antifa riot in Charlottesville by declaring a preemptive state of emergency for the weekend of August 11-12, 2018. The downtown pedestrian mall was fenced off ...
The edges of downtown fray rather quickly. A few blocks off the downtown mall puts you in the working areas. There you'll find the side streets, back streets, back doors, back walls, small businesses, apartments, parking lots, restaurants ...
This week, we finally make it to the top of Humpback Rocks. The climb takes you through dense woods and over slippery rocks. Near the top, three trolls and a sphinx guard the trail. Pick them out from a photo below ...
The farm trail from the visitor center at Humpback Rocks leads to a meadow along the Blue Ridge Parkway. In the lede photo, the farm trail winds through the woods to the left of the parkway, and takes you to a gate in the split ...
Humpback Rocks is an outcropping of greenstone on the top of Humpback Mountain, which lies at milepost 5.8 on the Blue Ridge Parkway, just a few miles south of the I-64 overpass at Afton Mountain ...
President James Madison, Father of the Constitution, built his home in Montpelier, Virginia. It's about 20 miles north of Jefferson's Monticello. Today, Madison's home is an historical and educational attraction ...
Jefferson built with bricks, and, today, The University is almost entirely surfaced in brick. Jefferson used bricks for pavillions and Lawn rooms and serpentine walls. Sometimes, the walls need repair ...
In Charlottesville, it rained on the day of the solar eclipse, August 21, 2017. By the time the clouds parted over The Lawn, the eclipse was well under way. At this latitude, it was a partial eclipse ...
There are two can’t miss shutter stops on I-95 between Virginia and Florida: South of the Border and any fireworks store. Pick one or the other, and, night or day, you'll find something to frame in vivid color ...
New Smyrna Beach is a miles long stretch of prime north Florida ocean front real estate. As you come across the causeway to the beach, you land on Flagler Avenue, and at the end of Flagler Avenue, you end up at The Breakers Restaurant ...
What do you do when you've got another 10 hours of sitting in a car on I-95 South? Naturally, you point the camera out the window. You don't even have to frame the shot, or focus it. Just shoot. See what you get ...
We finish the game day football series with the view from the hillside. For the price of a seat in the upper deck, you can enter the gates and find a place on the hillside. You can watch the game from ground level, or high up on the hill ...
We continue the game day football photos with the fan's view from the stands. Most games provide a sunny afternoon under blue skies. One or two night games per season offer a chilly evening under the lights ...
College football comes in unique flavors. Big programs have big stadiums. Perennial powerhouses have fanatic fans. Virginia is somewhere in the middle. It has a unique and scenic stadium, and old school fans ...
They come to The Lawn for Halloween - kids from around the city. The line funnels down the West Range, in front of the amphitheater, around the South Lawn, up the East Lawn, in front of the Rotunda, and then down the West Lawn ...
The downtown pedestrian mall runs from 2nd street to 7th street. The Omni hotel anchors the west end, and the open air pavilion anchors the east end. There are 120 shops and 30 restaurants on the mall, as well as an indoor ice skating ring ...
It was over before it started. If you had arrived at noon, the scheduled legal rally time, you'd have missed it. The riot began in the morning - August 12, 2017. Communists attacked the arriving speakers, the governor declared a state of emergency by 11:25 am ...
Railroads run North-South and East-West through the city. Bridges and crossings dot the roads. You can walk across them, drive across them, over and under them. You can be close to the trains ...
Charlottesville’s recent turmoil began when city leaders started a campaign to take down the statue of Robert E. Lee. It was a calculated campaign designed to cause racial conflict in the city, though most locals still have not comprehended that reality ...
The edges of town quickly give way to the countryside. This is where the land has memory. From downtown, five miles in any direction will put you on a country road. In some directions, it's no more than three miles. The interstate is only minutes from downtown, and once you're on the interstate, any exit will take you into the countryside ...
There is a student tradition, tolerated by the city, of painting the balustrades of the railroad bridge on Rugby Road. The bridge is known as Beta Bridge. The tradition is thought to have started in the 1960s. Graffiti artists bring their own paint. Someone keeps a storage bin at one end of the bridge ...
We pick up this post at the end of the previous one, and continue with a walk around The Lawn in the spring of 2015. The lede photo is an afternoon shot of Pavillion X. Notice the sandstone tint to the columns and woodwork of Pavillion X ...
Prior to closing the Rotunda in May of 2014 for engineering upgrades and restoration, the dome was stripped for resurfacing in 2013. New copper cladding was put on to seal the dome, and this became known as the copper top Rotunda. The copper was left exposed ...
West Main street runs west to east for about a mile, from the railroad bridge at 14th street to the Residence Inn at the west end of the downtown mall. About halfway from either end, it crosses over the Amtrak rails. Restaurants dot the north side of the street, almost from end to end ...
Thomas Jefferson’s university lies in the heart of central Virginia. It's the lifeblood of Charlottesville. Therefore, it is fitting to inaugurate the Virginia Photo Blog with an image of Jefferson’s iconic Rotunda. The Rotunda sits at the north end of The Lawn, and anchors the design of Jefferson’s academical village ...

About

ABOUT
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

JGR_LeicaR3_08_21_2015_12_.jpgThe photographer William Eggleston has famously made a career out of democratizing photography. He calls it photographing the ordinary. We know him for his color photographs of Memphis, TN - fields, roads, tricycles, parking lots, homes, churches, funerals, people, trash bins, store fronts, cars, gas stations, light poles, and dolls, the list goes on and on. But if you have ever lived in the south, you will recognize this world. It’s a place and a time, similar to others in America, but still somehow different. That’s the mark of a good photographer, something that makes you recognize a style, something that makes you want to say “That looks like an Eggleston.”

But today, in the digital age, the democratization of photography has balkanized the photograph. Is there any fragment of reality too small to photograph? Is any fragment better than any other? Is my photographic moment more important than yours? Today we flickr, instagram, facebook, and twitter our photos, as if to say, “Hey, look at this, this is a moment of my life.” Never mind how many billions of photographs will be taken this year. Never mind how transient and small the moment may be. And with billions of photographs, can anyone develop a style?

JGR_LeicaR3_08_21_2015_13_.jpgAnd yet…and yet… people want to take photographs more than ever. Technology drives the desire, and makes it easy to snap the photo. Who doesn’t take photographs? For the amateur, the biggest problem is what to do with them.  In the past, we pasted them into albums, and passed the albums around.  Today, we put them on ipads and pass the ipads around. But still, there are so many of them. And how do you pass the ipad around to everyone? And what do you do with the rest? And, just as important, do people really want to look at your photos?

As an amateur, you accumulate lots of different photos – people, scenery, family events. Notice that I didn’t say portraits, landscapes, and weddings. You don’t accidently accumulate portraits, landscapes, and wedding albums. You have to shoot those intentionally. Amatuers mostly take aspirational snapshots. Their defining quality is documentation.  I want this photo of the birthday party because it’s part of our family history. In years to come, it might give us a moment of pleasure to look back and remember this day. So you snap the picture.
JGR_LeicaR3_08_31_2015_45_.jpg
But sometimes you think the picture is a little better than a snapshot. You know you’re never going to be a professional, but something inside says, “I really like this picture, and I want to make an even better one.”  Is there room in life for the middling amateur? Are there any more Egglestons out there wandering the landscape, just shooting what interests them?

Hence, a blog.  It's a place in no man’s land, somewhere between snapshots and something worth a second look. So here goes. I shoot what interests me. Simple as that. A lot of it goes in the trash. You’ll never see it. But some of it I keep and some of it will end up here. The current stuff is better than the old stuff, but there’s a lot of old stuff. So some old and some new, until the old archive is exhausted and all is new.

October, 2017

Photos were taken along the Blue Ridge Parkway on Portra 160 with a Leica R3 and a 50mm summicron R.