Take A Picture, Tell A Story
I’ve always loved the interplay between words and photos. Together they can be more than the sum of their parts.
In a sense I’ve been working on “Take A Picture, Tell A Story” my whole career. During the summer of 1974, I went to Appalachia on my first photo project, spending three months documenting the coal miners’ strike in Harlan County, Kentucky. Along with a meagre amount of photo gear, I took a tape recorder and mic.
In 1996, two years into “Lost Promise: the Criminal Justice System,” I recorded stories for the text for the project. Since then I have done extensive audio recording for projects on emergency health care and the Pacific Exchange.
“Take a Picture, Tell A Story” is a continuation of “Lost Promise.” While working on a short project documenting the closing of San Francisco County Jail 3, then the state’s oldest county jail, a simple idea and phrase kept nagging at me. The phrase, “I take your photo, you tell me a story” sums up the idea. It was 2006 and San Francisco Sheriff Hennessey said yes.
Now this ongoing project has a name and a place to be seen and heard. – Robert Gumpert
Mautu Maea, 25 February 2017
Sentenced to four life sentences when he was 16, he has served almost 30 years so far.
He has been granted an appeal of the sentence and is hoping to be released after
serving “only” another seven years.
Search by name
Search By tag
- childhood
- community
- doing time
- drugs
- family
- food
- friendship
- games
- gay
- gender
- home
- homeless
- homelessness
- jail
- kids
- life
- love
- making money
- music
- poem
- pregnancy
- prison politics
- Prisons
- race
- reentry
- respect
- sex
- SHU
- spoken word
- spread
- suicide
- tattoos
- The Life
- the system
- transgender
- travel
- traveler
- violence
- woman
- work
Search by category