Tombstone, Arizona

Posted by Matt 3.25.2009 Under Personal, Project Installments

“Lefty,” a re-enactor with Tombstone’s Six Gun City gunfighting troop, prepares to take the stage as part of the recreation of the story of T.J. Waters, a man who was killed after striking a provocateur who made light of his flashy shirt.  Although Tombstone is known for the famous gunfight at the OK Coral, its violent and checkered history is scarred with scores of less-famous shootouts.  

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Tombstone closes up at dusk these days, the crackle of tourists’ tennis shoes crinkling across gravel as they make their respective ways back to cars parked along the side streets of U.S. Highway 80 before it drops south toward the Mexican border.  The desert evenings are quiet, uninsulated and the slightest sound tends to take on a palpable presence in the still air.  Children giggling, the sound of car doors being shut, the din of tires on the asphalt highway, the quick sandpaper sound of a car starting and then silence once again.  Standing in the changing hues of the Arizona dusk, the beast of the hot sun now looks peaceful as he falls asleep under the horizon.  It is hard to believe that the bone dry earth under my feet holds the ghosts of scores of gunfighters who tried their luck in the Wild West and lost.  At the height of its boom this brazen, raucous, and violent mining camp supported two undertakers at a time when most towns couldn’t support one.  Boot Hill, the town’s famous cemetery, is filled to the brim; a second graveyard opened nearby to accommodate the growth.  

Each year, short of a half-million people come to this tiny spot on the map, drawn in part by the legend of the gunfighters created and perpetuated by lawman-turned-Hollywood consultant Wyatt Earp and his counterpart, Bat Masterson.  These men were, by many accounts, part lawman, part vigilante, sometimes murderers and sometimes keepers of the peace.  As it turns out, the winners do write history, Earp and Masterson living on until old age building the myth of the Wild West gunfighters, the greater parable of good versus evil drafted into the subtext of their stories.  

I would argue that it’s not the guns or the killing that interests people passing through Tombstone, rather the stories that quench our collective thirst for mythology, for the distilled plot-line that forces man to face his own mortality in the most dire of circumstances.  Through these characters, history itself becomes an argument, hyper-fixated on the traits that we deem noble, letting the unsightly rough edges fall into the soft focus of the background.  The legend is skimmed from the sludge of its human roots in such a way that the story of men like Doc Holliday makes me wonder if Christ’s Second Coming were as a gunslinger.  Holliday had tuberculosis, his cough a constant reminder of his own death sentence, the disease making it near impossible for him to practice his professional skill as a dentist.  An educated Georgian, he took to the dryer climate of the west as therapy for his disease, becoming a gambler and, by proxy, a shootist.  He is not legendary for shooting men, rather for his calm, sardonic demeanor with which he squared off with death, for the story of how his gambles with guns and cards somehow always left him with the upper hand in spite of his stature as a small, frail, and sick man.  We are impressed with his legend because we see in it a man fiercely loyal to his friends who had no illusions of immortality, that he was strangely freed to take life’s biggest gambles by the notion that his death was always imminent, be it bullet or disease.

In spite of his risks, Holliday avoided the bullets, dying many years after his time in Tombstone.  His death tells of a man who was lucid at the time of his passing, curious and self-aware that his final breaths would be drawn not standing up in his boots, but barefoot and reclined in a hospital bed.  Peeking over the sheets at his bare toes, Holliday spoke his last words: “Well I’ll be damned.  This is too funny.”

Or so the legend has it.

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Just returned from a fun little trip to Arizona to photograph former GITMO guard, Terry Holdbrooks.  Holdbrooks converted to Islam, in part, because of his experiences at the detention facility.  Definitely one of those welcome assignments affording me the opportunity to learn more about one of the more contentious policies of the former administration, the off-shoring and special classification of prisoners, ostensibly to circumvent protections afforded under the Constitution and the Geneva Conventions.  The article about Holdbrooks’ experience and conversion is available online, here.  

Also made a last minute change to my ticket giving me a little extra time to work on a couple other stories while I was away, detouring first to photograph gunfights in the wild west town of Tombstone before continuing down to the newest strip of border fencing on the arid, mountainous Mexican frontier between Douglas and Nogales, Arizona.  Definitely a productive (and sleepless) few days.  More to follow from these project installments in the coming days.

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Luceo Images Guest Blogs for PDNPulse

Posted by Matt 3.13.2009 Under Luceo, Web

PDNPulse is featuring a series of guest blog posts from Luceo Images.  The series began this week and will cover a series of short topics related to forming a collective.  The first post is available here with more to follow in the upcoming days.

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Fire

Posted by Matt 3.9.2009 Under Uncategorized

Drove by a little grassfire on Denver’s eastern edge today.  Somewhat surreal because the fire was burning inside of a retention dam through a bunch of dried cattails surrounding the shallow pools of water in the low points on the landscape.  Funny to photograph this stuff after working big wildfire for seven years; it’s hard not to armchair quarterback and, well, for a fire surrounded on all sides by roads and lush golf greens, this thing probably could have been left to burn itself out and the resulting black spot on the landscape would have been exactly the same size and shape as it ended up after all the attention it received.

Still, the one thing that I miss about the smoke from wildfire is how dreamlike it makes the landscape, how the light is diffused through it like a soft disco ball dappling everything in smooth brushstrokes.  It’s a secret project that I started shooting a few years back, something that I’d like to pick back up again, assignment permitting.  

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The Day After

Posted by Matt 3.9.2009 Under Personal

Much to my surprise the 30 Fairy didn’t sprinkle any 30 dust on me, no special flash of clarity except that whatever mental block had been separating me from Guitar Hero vanished without explanation.  Maybe the secret of the third decade is buried in that overrated game.  

And, for closet Tetris fans, that’s Gorgeous Joel pictured on the right of the frame above.  He’s legendary.  In a way that I think David Letterman would appreciate.  Thoroughly.

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30

Posted by Matt 3.9.2009 Under Personal

Turned 30 last friday.  Just another day, but also something that comes a bit like a time-out in the game of life, a moment when the announcers fill time by tallying the score and recapping the plays.  Ah, hindsight.

Trekked over to the edge of the city that evening to grab a bite with friends where I discovered two important things: 1. their son has started walking; and 2. Cheetos baked taste almost identical to Cheetos fried.  

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Luceo Images Opening

Posted by Matt 3.3.2009 Under Luceo

Six prints from the Luceo photographers will be featured in a show in Raleigh, North Carolina.  The opening will be at Cafe Helios Gallery following on the heels of our good friend Shawn Rocco’s Cellular Obscura show.  Rocco’s work has recently attracted the attention of PDN Pulse here.  The premise for the series of photographs featured in his recent show is simply that they’re made with what’s become the contemporary Polaroid: a cellphone camera.  

Anyhow, it’s an honor to be selected to follow Shawn’s act.  

For those able to make the show, six original prints are for sale in the Cafe Helios Gallery.  For those unable to make the show, we’re offering a short selection of prints for a limited time on Luceo’s store page.  

Luceo Images First Anniversary Opening

7pm,  Friday, March 6th

Cafe Helios Gallery

Raleigh, North Carolina

Directions

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