Looking at Appalachia – One Year Later

It has been one year since Roger May brought the Looking at Appalachia photography project to Alleghany County.  The 75 photos were exhibited in the Blue Ridge Business Development Center for one month and were viewed by people from 12 states and two foreign countries.  The timing of the exhibit coincided with an ongoing effort to engage in economic and community development in Alleghany.  It was hoped that the exhibit would generate conversation about how we, and others, view our county and region.

Since last October, the photos have been shown in at Radford University (Radford, Virginia), the University of North Carolina – Asheville, Adrian College (Adrian, Michigan), Robert Morris University (Moon Township, Pennsylvania), West Virginia University and will be shown at the Levine Museum of the New South in Charlotte, NC this November.  After that showing, the current exhibit will be retired.

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Roger May – photo courtesy of Meg Wilson

Roger has also been busy.  He has led an online class with the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University and taught a class on Multimedia Storytelling at the Appalachian Writers Workshop.  He has also started a new photography project, Laid Bare, which examines the effects of mountain top removal for coal extraction in West Virginia and eastern Kentucky.

In a recent interview, Roger reflected on the past year and shared insights he has gathered along the way.

When he looks back at the show in Sparta, Roger describes it as exactly what he envisioned when he and others began talking about taking the photos on the road.  “The reception was one of the best attended, and was supported by a cross-section of the community,” he said.  “I’m glad that Alleghany took a chance on us.  At that point, we weren’t completely sure what the trajectory of the project would be.”

Roger said that one of the most surprising aspects of the project is how interest continues to grow in Appalachia.  He said that the region is incredibly diverse and defies broad generalizations.  “When you consider the breadth of culture, economy and even dialect, there are vast differences across Appalachia.  We tend to forget that cities such as Asheville, NC and Chattanooga, TN are in the heart of Appalachia.” He points out that those urban areas are much different that the stereotypical hills and hollows, and th extractive economies tied to coal and timber that we often associate with Appalachia.  And even in the more rural areas, an interstate highway or major manufacturing facility can completely change the socio-economic conditions of a county.

What’s next For Looking at Appalachia? May hopes that the project will continue to evolve and take on new shape and form.  He hopes to expand the website to include audio and video stories.  He has ambitions to start a podcast as a way to amplify voices of those in the region, especially those who seek to document the people and places of Appalachia.

Perhaps his most thought-provoking statement about the future of the project also strikes at the core of any regional social or economic strategy:  “We (Looking at Appalachia) have to be open to change.  We have to be conscious of not only how we view ourselves, but how others see our region.  Once we limit our perspective, we lose the reason for the project.”

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Photos from 2015 can be viewed at http://www.lookingatappalachia.org.  Photos for 2016 can be submitted at the same site.

 

 

 

Roger May – Looking at Appalachia

“We must get beyond our stereotyping histories and fears of misrepresenting poor Appalachian culture as, all of us: when in fact, this work really is about “All of Us” in the broadest sense. We all need to perceive ourselves more clearly interconnected, internally, humanly and less defensively.” Shelby Lee Adams

 Photographer Rob Amberg. June 2, 2014. Kelsey Green herding sheep to the barn, Paw Paw, Madison County, North Carolina

Photographer Rob Amberg. June 2, 2014. Kelsey Green herding sheep to the barn, Paw Paw, Madison County, North Carolina

When asked how he goes about carving life-like characters from a block of basswood, an old woodcarver replied, “I just whittle away everything that doesn’t look like it belongs.”  Sculptors use similar imagery when they talk of “releasing” a sculpture from a slab of stone.  Both describe a process that requires one to look beyond the obvious piece of raw material to see the beauty and artistry hidden from the casual observer.  This is the process that Roger May and a group of contributing photographers have set out to do with Looking at Appalachia.

Roger May, Project Director of Looking at Appalachia

Roger May, Project Director of Looking at Appalachia

Roger May was born in the Tug River Valley, a border land between eastern Kentucky and southwestern West Virginia.  In the heart of coal country, the Tug River area is infamously identified with the Hatfield and McCoy families and The Battle of Blair Mountain.  Roger’s mom, a struggling single mother on welfare, moved the family to North Carolina in search of steady work and financial stability when Roger was 14 years old.

Other than a short stint with his dad in Kentucky, Roger spent his high school years in North Carolina.  A student at Athens High School in Raleigh, he went on to receive a basketball scholarship to Montreat College in the mountains of western North Carolina.  But college classes sandwiched between morning and evening practices wasn’t how Roger envisioned spending his days.  He left school and married at age 19.  Six weeks later the young couple  discovered they were expecting their first child – a daughter.  Roger joined the Army and a couple of years later their son was born while they were stationed in Alaska.

During his seven years of military service, Roger always found himself in or near mountains.  After his military days were behind him, his desire was to move back home to West Virginia.  But, employment opportunities were limited.  Now a single father, as his mom before him, he needed a career that provided stability for his family.  He found himself back in North Carolina, and currently works in Information Technology (IT) in local government.  Married now for three years to what he describes as “a great West Virginia gal,” Roger and his wife have a blended family of four children spread from college to elementary school.

Each of these life steps whittled away chips from the raw blank that was becoming Roger May.  As the chips piled around his feet, his life’s purpose became more defined.

At age 29, Roger began a serious pursuit of photography as an art form.  High quality digital cameras had become more commonplace.  The digital format allowed for affordable practice and experimentation.  Largely self-taught, he used his emerging skills to reinforce his sense of memory, place and connection with his West Virginian roots.  As he examines the totality of his photographic work, it is obvious to him that his captured images are largely autobiographical.  Roger describes his photos as a collection of people and places he misses from the mountains.

After seven years of honing his craft, Roger sorted through over 10,000 photos and began a long series of edits.  The resulting work was a photobook entitled Testify which he describes as, “A visual love letter to Appalachia, the land of my blood.”  He used Kickstarter, a crowdfunding platform, to breathe life into the project.  But, Roger’s desire is to reach a much broader audience on a topic near to his heart.

For several generations, images of barefoot children and haggard women on the porches of broken down homes reinforced the stereotype of Appalachia as a poverty stricken region filled with feuding, toothless hillbillies.  Pop culture contributed to this imagery by way of Li’l Abner and Snuffy Smith comics, and films such as Deliverance.

Looking at Appalachia is an effort to combat those negative stereotypes.  The contributors’ photos are all current for the year of submission and represent the vast diversity Appalachia.  They hope this project generates conversation about our cultural heritage, and helps promote and further a sense of pride in our region.

Kristian Thacker. April 25, 2014. Snaggy Mountain Farm, Burnsville, Yancey County, North Carolina.

Photographer Kristian Thacker. April 25, 2014. Snaggy Mountain Farm, Burnsville, Yancey County, North Carolina.

So, is our cultural pride missing, taken for granted or just underdeveloped?  If so, how do we develop or enhance pride in a way that is positive and productive?  Maybe a more important question to ponder is whether our perceptual challenges are internal, external, or combinations of both?  These are the types of discussions this project hopes to generate in our communities.

While the woodcarver or sculptor may have a clear vision for what they hope to make from that wooden blank or block of granite, the reality is that the characteristics of the wood or stone dictate the finished product.  These mountains are nothing more that wood and stone.  The people here are a product of these mountains.  Pride doesn’t come from trying to hammer us into something we are not.  Pride comes from celebrating who we are.  Looking at Appalachia is a celebration of mountain life.

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We are fortunate to host an exhibition of 75 photographs from the Looking at Appalachia project at the Blue Ridge Business Development Center (BDC) in Sparta, NC from September 19 through October 31, 2015.  A reception and panel discussion of the project will be held on September 26, 2015 at 4:00 pm at the BDC.

To learn more about Roger May visit www.walkyourcamera.com or www.rogermayphotography.com.  You can also follow him on Facebook and Instagram.

To read what others are saying about Looking at Appalachia explore the following links:

National Geographic

New York Times

North Carolina Public Radio

Global Citizen

Poster designed by Liz Pavlovic of Morgantown, West Virginia Copies are available contact Dale Caveny at bdcadmin@blueridgebdc.org

Poster designed by Liz Pavlovic of Morgantown, West Virginia
Copies are available: contact Dale Caveny at bdcadmin@blueridgebdc.org