Portraits and Dreams

The inner lives of children in Wendy Ewald's 'Portraits and Dreams'

Words by  

Mack

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© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams

When Wendy Ewald arrived in the heart of the Appalachian Mountains in 1975, she began a project that aimed to reveal the intimate dreams and fears of local schoolchildren. Tasked with finding authentic ways of representing the lives of these children, she gave each of them a camera and interviewed them about their childhood in the mountains. Through these intriguing transcripts and photographs, we discover the families as seen through the eyes of their children: where domestic, rural life is understood with startling openness and depth. In Portraits and Dreams, life’s most mysterious realities – love, loss, violence, death, new life – are given voice through an altogether novel discovery: the camera. We learn the eloquence and originality with which children see the world and we see a generous new way of engaging children in the possibilities of the photographic medium. 

© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams

This revised and expanded edition of Ewald’s now-rare book, first published in 1985 and hailed as “An American masterpiece,” offers access to a different and broadened view of the rural south over the span of 35 years, and includes contemporary pictures and stories by eight of the students from the original publication.

© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams
"A unique vision of the rural south: one where imagination is uninhibited, aspiration is untainted by economic realities, and where the adults — tired, covered in coal dust, distinctly not Dolly Parton — seem to live in a parallel universe."
The Financial Times

© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams
"Encouraged by Ewald to delve into their dreams, the children return from sleep with visions as dark as as a Grimms’ fairy tale: of killing a best friend, or of a brother buried under a woodpile. But it’s the revelations of waking thoughts that truly disturb."
– Andrea K. Scott, The New Yorker

© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams
"These are photographs by children from the hollers of Letcher County, Kentucky – children familiar with mountains and woods and the ways of the small animals they hunt there with their .22s, children familiar with strip mines and shaft mines and deaths by mining accidents, black lung, suicide"
The Guardian

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Portraits and Dreams

The inner lives of children in Wendy Ewald's 'Portraits and Dreams'

Words by  

Mack

Save
Unsave
The inner lives of children in Wendy Ewald's 'Portraits and Dreams'
© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams

When Wendy Ewald arrived in the heart of the Appalachian Mountains in 1975, she began a project that aimed to reveal the intimate dreams and fears of local schoolchildren. Tasked with finding authentic ways of representing the lives of these children, she gave each of them a camera and interviewed them about their childhood in the mountains. Through these intriguing transcripts and photographs, we discover the families as seen through the eyes of their children: where domestic, rural life is understood with startling openness and depth. In Portraits and Dreams, life’s most mysterious realities – love, loss, violence, death, new life – are given voice through an altogether novel discovery: the camera. We learn the eloquence and originality with which children see the world and we see a generous new way of engaging children in the possibilities of the photographic medium. 

© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams

This revised and expanded edition of Ewald’s now-rare book, first published in 1985 and hailed as “An American masterpiece,” offers access to a different and broadened view of the rural south over the span of 35 years, and includes contemporary pictures and stories by eight of the students from the original publication.

© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams
"A unique vision of the rural south: one where imagination is uninhibited, aspiration is untainted by economic realities, and where the adults — tired, covered in coal dust, distinctly not Dolly Parton — seem to live in a parallel universe."
The Financial Times

© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams
"Encouraged by Ewald to delve into their dreams, the children return from sleep with visions as dark as as a Grimms’ fairy tale: of killing a best friend, or of a brother buried under a woodpile. But it’s the revelations of waking thoughts that truly disturb."
– Andrea K. Scott, The New Yorker

© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams
"These are photographs by children from the hollers of Letcher County, Kentucky – children familiar with mountains and woods and the ways of the small animals they hunt there with their .22s, children familiar with strip mines and shaft mines and deaths by mining accidents, black lung, suicide"
The Guardian

More information

Save
Unsave

Portraits and Dreams

The inner lives of children in Wendy Ewald's 'Portraits and Dreams'

Words by

Mack

Portraits and Dreams
© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams

When Wendy Ewald arrived in the heart of the Appalachian Mountains in 1975, she began a project that aimed to reveal the intimate dreams and fears of local schoolchildren. Tasked with finding authentic ways of representing the lives of these children, she gave each of them a camera and interviewed them about their childhood in the mountains. Through these intriguing transcripts and photographs, we discover the families as seen through the eyes of their children: where domestic, rural life is understood with startling openness and depth. In Portraits and Dreams, life’s most mysterious realities – love, loss, violence, death, new life – are given voice through an altogether novel discovery: the camera. We learn the eloquence and originality with which children see the world and we see a generous new way of engaging children in the possibilities of the photographic medium. 

© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams

This revised and expanded edition of Ewald’s now-rare book, first published in 1985 and hailed as “An American masterpiece,” offers access to a different and broadened view of the rural south over the span of 35 years, and includes contemporary pictures and stories by eight of the students from the original publication.

© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams
"A unique vision of the rural south: one where imagination is uninhibited, aspiration is untainted by economic realities, and where the adults — tired, covered in coal dust, distinctly not Dolly Parton — seem to live in a parallel universe."
The Financial Times

© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams
"Encouraged by Ewald to delve into their dreams, the children return from sleep with visions as dark as as a Grimms’ fairy tale: of killing a best friend, or of a brother buried under a woodpile. But it’s the revelations of waking thoughts that truly disturb."
– Andrea K. Scott, The New Yorker

© Wendy Ewald | Portraits and Dreams
"These are photographs by children from the hollers of Letcher County, Kentucky – children familiar with mountains and woods and the ways of the small animals they hunt there with their .22s, children familiar with strip mines and shaft mines and deaths by mining accidents, black lung, suicide"
The Guardian

More information

Save
Unsave
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