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  • Todd Haynes, film maker, director and writer. His films span four decades with consistent themes examining the personalities of well-known musicians, dysfunctional and dystopian societies, and blurred gender roles. (wikipedia)
    Todd Haynes film director .jpg
  • Owen and Luke Wilson are actors, writers and brothers who have appeared in numerous films. Primarily known for their collaborations with director Wes Anderson. This photograph was made in 1999 in Los Angeles early in their career. Their mother is the photographer Laura Wilson
    r.mcclaran-Luke_Owen_Wilson-2.jpg
  • Owen and Luke Wilson are actors, writers and brothers who have appeared in numerous films. Primarily known for their collaborations with director Wes Anderson. This photograph was made in 1999 in Los Angeles early in their career. Their mother is the photographer Laura Wilson
    mcclaran-owen-luke_wilson-2-wrkng.jpg
  • Bill Porter sold household products door to door for the Watkins Company for 40 years in spite of being disabled by cerebral palsy. His life story was made into a film starring William H Macy.<br />
Bill retired from selling door to door to work as a motivational speaker and an online salesman. He passed away in 2013.
    portraits-28.JPG
  • Barrow 34 pages, features twelve black and white and four color images, archival pigment printing on Moab Entrada Bright, Hardbound in slipcase. Edition of ten with two artist's proofs. Signed and numbered. First copy $450, with price increases as edition is sold.<br />
<br />
From the Introduction:<br />
Barrow, Alaska occupies the northern most point of land in the United States, pressed hard upon the Chukchi Sea and the Arctic Ocean, some 330 miles north of the Arctic Circle. The native Inupiat people have lived in Barrow for four thousand years and continue to practice traditional ways of life, including whaling and subsistence hunting. As there are no roads in, the city is accessible only by air for 10 months of the year and is arguably the most isolated city in the country. •<br />
<br />
I’ve had the good fortune to visit Barrow twice on assignments and on this most recent trip I scheduled time to spend making photographs of this unique American place. •<br />
<br />
It was March and while the sun was up for eight or so hours, it’s low angle made for beautiful light, when not obscured by persistent ice fog. Temperatures ranged from a high of -11° F to -30° F with a constant wind coming off the ocean, making for somewhat difficult conditions. Batteries stopped working and the extreme temperature even affected my normally very fine grain film. •<br />
<br />
Knowing that producing a meaningful document of the people of Barrow would be impossible in my short time, I chose to focus on the landscape. As I walked the streets, vigilant for polar bears, I became entranced by the stark, yet subtle textures of the largely featureless tundra, and how it merged with the frozen ocean; by the low angled light, and the often whimsical sculptural forms, that I encountered. These are the resulting photographs.
    Barrow-Cover.JPG

Robbie McClaran

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