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  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Dallas texas, 1983
    mcclaran-awm-06.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Dallas texas, 1983
    klan-dallas-83-11.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Dallas texas, 1983
    klan-dallas-83-8.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Dallas texas, 1983
    klan-dallas-83-5.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Dallas texas, 1983
    klan-dallas-83-4.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Dallas texas, 1983
    mcclaran-awm-07.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Dallas texas, 1983
    mcclaran-awm-05.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Dallas texas, 1983
    mcclaran-awm-02.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Dallas texas, 1983
    mcclaran-awm-04.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Dallas texas, 1983
    mcclaran-awm-01.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Dallas texas, 1983
    mcclaran-awm-03.JPG
  • Ruins of the Branch Davidian Compound near Waco Texas
    mcclaran-awm-40.JPG
  • Jerry Falwell led Moral Majority rally, Dallas Texas, 1983
    mcclaran-awm-10.JPG
  • Jerry Falwell led Moral Majority rally, Dallas Texas, 1983
    mcclaran-awm-09.JPG
  • Ruins of the Branch Davidian Compound near Waco Texas
    mcclaran-awm-39.JPG
  • Ruins of the Branch Davidian Compound near Waco Texas
    mcclaran-awm-38.JPG
  • Jerry Falwell led Moral Majority rally, Dallas Texas, 1983
    mcclaran-awm-08.JPG
  • Ruins of the Branch Davidian Compound near Waco Texas
    mcclaran-awm-37.JPG
  • Pat Buchanan campaign rally, Twin Falls, Idaho 1995
    mcclaran-awm-55.JPG
  • Pat Buchanan campaign rally, Twin Falls, Idaho 1995
    mcclaran-awm-52.JPG
  • Ruins Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, destroyed in the bombing by Timothy McVeigh
    mcclaran-awm-44.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Pulaski Tennessee, 1996
    mcclaran-awm-69.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Pulaski Tennessee, 1996
    mcclaran-awm-68.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Pulaski Tennessee, 1996
    mcclaran-awm-61.JPG
  • Pat Buchanan campaign rally, Twin Falls, Idaho 1995
    mcclaran-awm-54.JPG
  • Ruins Alfred R. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, destroyed in the bombing by Timothy McVeigh
    mcclaran-awm-46.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Pulaski Tennessee, 1996
    mcclaran-awm-66.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Pulaski Tennessee, 1996
    mcclaran-awm-65.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Pulaski Tennessee, 1996
    mcclaran-awm-63.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Pulaski Tennessee, 1996
    mcclaran-awm-62.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Pulaski Tennessee, 1996
    mcclaran-awm-59.JPG
  • Gun show, Portland Oregon, 1995
    mcclaran-awm-30.JPG
  • Gun show, Portland Oregon, 1995
    mcclaran-awm-29.JPG
  • Pat Buchanan campaign rally, Twin Falls, Idaho 1995
    mcclaran-awm-51.JPG
  • Pat Buchanan campaign rally, Twin Falls, Idaho 1995
    mcclaran-awm-50.JPG
  • Pat Buchanan campaign rally, Twin Falls, Idaho 1995
    mcclaran-awm-49.JPG
  • Ruins Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, destroyed in the bombing by Timothy McVeigh
    mcclaran-awm-45.JPG
  • Ruins Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, destroyed in the bombing by Timothy McVeigh
    mcclaran-awm-43.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Pulaski Tennessee, 1996
    mcclaran-awm-70.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Pulaski Tennessee, 1996
    mcclaran-awm-67.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Pulaski Tennessee, 1996
    mcclaran-awm-64.JPG
  • Ku Klux Klan rally, Pulaski Tennessee, 1996
    mcclaran-awm-60.JPG
  • Gun show, Portland Oregon, 1995
    mcclaran-awm-31.JPG
  • Pat Buchanan campaign rally, Twin Falls, Idaho 1995
    mcclaran-awm-53.JPG
  • Ruins Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, destroyed in the bombing by Timothy McVeigh
    mcclaran-awm-42.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on13.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on09.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on03.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on02.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on22.JPG
  • Abandoned Cotton Gin, SE Arkansas. <br />
<br />
As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on21.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on20.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on19.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on18.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on17.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on16.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on10.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on07.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on06.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on15.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on12.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on11.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on05.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on04.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on01.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on14.JPG
  • As a child my family would take long trips each summer to visit relatives, either in Texas for my Father’s side or the Mid-west for my Mom’s. I’d sit in that back seat staring out the window as we rolled down the two lane, watching out the window as the world unfolded before my eyes, always curious for what was around the next bend. The America a cross-country traveler encounters today is as changed as that young boy in that back seat. •<br />
<br />
Having worked in the documentary tradition for most of my career, I began this project with the intention of telling a story about America’s heartland. As the country underwent the transition from the boom of the late nineties to the post 9-11 years, and the economic collapse to follow, I too was going through my own personal period of transition. The photographs reflect a search for my own soul as well a search for the soul of the heartland. Over time I came to realize the story I was telling was as much my own as it was the heartland’s. •<br />
<br />
The earliest pictures in this body of work were made near my hometown in Arkansas. Over the course of several years I began visiting places throughout the country that have deeply personal connections for me; my mother’s birthplace in Ohio, the lake cabin I spent summers in my youth. Some locations were chosen for their iconic American names such as Dodge City and Paris Texas. Others were discovered randomly, in the course of travel. •<br />
<br />
I’ve always believed in the power of photography as a rich and robust language, in the poetry of images. I began to think of this work as a visual folk song, a folk lament. I borrowed the title from a Woody Guthrie song that seemed to fit. From Here On.
    r.mcclaran-from_here_on08.JPG
  • Dallas, Texas 1985
    mcclaran-vintage freedrinks.JPG
  • Wichita falls, Texas, 1986 - Color work, 1981 - 2012
    mcclaran-color28.JPG

Robbie McClaran

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