Untitled, from the portfolio Welsh Miners
Artist
Bruce Davidson
(American, born 1933)
Printed by
Photographs printed by Bruce Davidson
Publisher
Douglas Kenyon, Inc. and Tackfield, Ltd.
Date1965, printed 1982
MediumGelatin silver print
Dimensionsimage: 7 7/8 in x 11 7/8 in; sheet: 16 in x 19 7/8 in
ClassificationPhotograph
Credit LineMary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, gift of Noel and Florence Rothman
Object number2001.26d
Text EntriesOne Book One Northwestern, 2021–22
A child pushing a stroller with a doll and teddy bear pauses alongside a home that backs up against a coal processing plant. The thick smoke emerging from the plant stands in stark contrast to the bright white linens hanging out to dry as well as the innocence of the child at play. The photograph is part of a larger series by photographer Bruce Davidson, who documented daily life in the mining town of Cwmcarn in South Wales three years before the mine closed. Davidson, a photojournalist by training, captured the humanity of a community that was economically dependent on mining against the backdrop of the environmental devastation caused by it. While the operating life of a mine is relatively short – a few years to a few decades – its impact on society and the environmental is long-lasting. In The Story of More, Jahren emphasizes that our supply of fossil fuel is finite and, considering that its use tripled in the last five decades, our best chance lies in reducing our everyday consumption of energy.
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