Wolves in Tuscany?
Yes! We had heard bleating and strange noises coming from the sheep pen up the road. Unusual for middle of the day when the sheep are often lying about or huddled under a tree in the shade. Maggie went up the hill to see what was the matter. A wolf had gotten into the fenced in enclosure and killed two pregnant mothers. I raced up to the pen to see for myself.
There are no words that can make it become something other than what it is. And a photograph is simpler still; no tricks of the light, no angle that dramatizes it to make it more horrific or sad, just the plain fact of what a slaughtered animal looks like in the moment after its death. Sometimes just bearing witness is enough.
I never was one to photograph wars, or the depths of poverty, because I couldn’t stand the idea of making esthetic decisions about framing when dealing with such enormous human events. It was different when I went into Ground Zero for 9 months, that was all Aftermath, and as such it needed the record to be made for posterity, but to witness slaughter and disease and human wreckage and while doing it make something beautifully framed seems beyond my capacity.
Stop sending me mail please!
> Op 28 aug. 2015, om 02:58 heeft ONCE MORE AROUND THE SUN het volgende geschreven: > >
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Hi,
I don’t know how or why you get my blog sent to you. I am not sending it. Perhaps you have subscribed accidentally. Please unsubscribe as I can’t undo this for you.
Joel
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I’m surprised by how shocking I find “just the plain fact of what a slaughtered animal looks like in the moment after its death.” It’s a reminder of the fundamental brutality that must occur for one animal to eat another. I do hope the farmer will at least be able to sell the meat so this sad event won’t be a complete waste.
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