reellis67
Subscriber
I'd never heard of this person before I listened to the NPR story I've linked below, but while listening to the story I was entranced by this fellow. He was apparently a very odd person - didn't fit in at all it sounds like - but he photographed the people in his community in their day-to-day selves rather than all made up for a portrait, and his efforts went undiscovered for 20 years before someone realized the value in what he had done.
A musician composed some music based on his impression of these photographs, and the man, and in the interview he posed what I though was a really fascinating observation - how many other people are floating around out there, doing something important, but never being discovered or appreciated until after they are dead? Now, I'm not part of the entitlement crowd who feel that everyone is extraordinary, but I do think that there are some people out there doing things like this, who are really under appreciated, or just plain unappreciated and it really stuck me when that came up in the interview.
I was moved by the depth that the musician went to to express his interpretation of this fellows life and work in a different art form, and I'm intrigued by his observation, so I though that I'd throw it out there in case someone else might be interested. It does focus a lot on the musician, but there is some interesting content on the photographer as well...
Mike Disfarmer NPR story
Mike Disfarmer's work
- Randy
A musician composed some music based on his impression of these photographs, and the man, and in the interview he posed what I though was a really fascinating observation - how many other people are floating around out there, doing something important, but never being discovered or appreciated until after they are dead? Now, I'm not part of the entitlement crowd who feel that everyone is extraordinary, but I do think that there are some people out there doing things like this, who are really under appreciated, or just plain unappreciated and it really stuck me when that came up in the interview.
I was moved by the depth that the musician went to to express his interpretation of this fellows life and work in a different art form, and I'm intrigued by his observation, so I though that I'd throw it out there in case someone else might be interested. It does focus a lot on the musician, but there is some interesting content on the photographer as well...
Mike Disfarmer NPR story
Mike Disfarmer's work
- Randy
Last edited by a moderator: