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True Grit

October 2017

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Shutterbug

CAPTURING AMERICAN TRADITIONS IN TIMELESS BLACK-AND-WHITE IMAGES.

- Barry Tanenbaum

True Grit

IN 2006, MICHAEL CROUSER TOOK THE FIRST PHOTOGRAPH in his mountain ranch project. Ten years later he took the last image to complete Mountain Ranch, the book that grew from the project. He calls the book “an exploration of the disappearing world of cattle ranching in the mountains of Colorado,” but it’s more than that: it’s a story of the ties and traditions of families, and a story of an America that was, struggling to still be.

His images, made with film cameras, chronicle the yearlong cycle of the ranchers’ lives, during which he avoided “evidence of modernity.” You’ll see no sunglasses, tennis shoes, or baseball hats; none of the things, he says, “that would yank the viewer out of the story.”

Crouser, who lived in New York at the time he started the project, headed to northwestern Colorado at the suggestion of a friend who lived near the ranchers. Introductions were made, and though at first they wondered what a New Yorker was doing there, he entered the lives of nine different ranching families. “Eventually I became quite good friends with them,” he says, “as I watched their families grow and documented what I think is an important part of American culture.”

SEASON TO SEASON 

He set no time limit on the project. The goal was to get it right.

Shutterbug

هذه القصة من طبعة October 2017 من Shutterbug.

اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.

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المزيد من القصص من Shutterbug

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