An appreciation of Joshua Dudley Greer’s Somewhere Along the Line
On April Fool’s Day 1996, my bride of exactly one day and I climbed into my little Ford Probe in upstate New York and headed west on a yearlong honeymoon, gigging as traveling occupational therapists. We lived in Los Angeles, Fort Wayne, Indiana, and Raleigh, North Carolina for 3-4 month engagements at nursing homes. On weekends we explored the surrounding area and in between gigs for weeks at a time we meandered across the American landscape and back again. What we learned on that long sojourn changed us and has stayed with us ever since. We drove and hiked and swam and flew and marveled at and studied this whole wide continent. In our work, we got to know people of every ethnic and racial background, people who were indigent and people who were wealthy, all of them broken and seeking healing at our hands. On our travels, we saw more of the same, but also began to imagine the landscape itself as a fantastically varied and torn, sometimes even ruined, expanse. But one that seemed, let me be maudlin here for a minute, to have a heartbeat and a soulful yearning to heal itself, to explain us in some way, to shape itself into a whole where we might fit.
Here’s an example. We were headed back East, crossing the broad and unpeopled plains of Wyoming, and arrived late one night in a town called Green River. The next morning I woke up, stepped outside my door at the back of the hotel, and nearly fell over in the shadow of a looming moonscape we hadn’t known was there. This sort of thing happened over and over on our yearlong journey. The continent’s shocking presence insisting we attend. I say all this as an introduction to the photographer who made this picture.
Joshua Dudley Greer – Green River, Wyoming in his book of photographs Somewhere Along the Line
I saw it today in a review of his new book, and instantly zoomed back to that moment in the back of that hotel, coffee spilling from my cup.
Joshua Dudley Greer, the review says, spent a year doing what we did, minus the therapy gigs but plus a genius eye for the beautiful, harsh and puzzling truths one finds along the highways of America. You can see more of his pictures just by Googling, but I’d recommend you do what I just did, and purchase his book Somewhere Along the Line. Every picture, as Rod Stewart sang, tells a story, but these do way more than that. They speak directly to that troubling, inspiring experience Chris and I shared on our yearlong honeymoon. They throw you up against the landscape, the individuals who – like us – try to make sense of it, make use of it, find themselves in it. They hit hard at the ways we’ve uglified it, yet they sing of the ways it resists degradation, at how it shapes what we do and who we are, despite ourselves.
I’m rambling, and I apologize for that. Clearly, I have a lot of work to do in coming to grips with this trip taken nearly a quarter of a century ago. Greer’s photographs can help, I think. Not as nostalgic travelogue, but as a Whitmanic yawp that says it’s all still out here, it’s all still just as profound and insistent as you found it. What have we done to ourselves, to our land; what is it doing to us? Come see. You’ll be better for it.
By the way, the moving Washington Post review by Kenneth Dickerman that turned me on to this book is here.
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