David Wharton was born in New York City, in 1947, and was raised in New Jersey. He attended Colgate University, where he earned his B.A. in English in 1969. After an extended trip through Andean South America in 1974, he resolved to teach himself how to use a camera and make photography his life's work. From 1976 to 1978 he worked as a photojournalist for the Willamette Valley Observer in Eugene, Oregon. He then entered graduate school at the University of Texas at Austin, where he earned his M.F.A. in photography in 1986 and his Ph.D. in American studies in 1994. He taught at the University of Texas at San Antonio from 1996 to 1998 and, since 1999, has been Director of Documentary Studies and an assistant professor of Southern studies in the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi in Oxford. His photographs have been exhibited throughout the United States, Latin America, and Europe, and his first book, The Soul of a Small Texas Town: Photographs, Memories, and History from McDade, was published in 2000 by the University of Oklahoma
"Small Town South by David Wharton is a black and white photography
essay on small towns typical of the South in the United States. The
photos are taken from unique points of view with the purpose of
telling a story of yesterday and today. Each reveals something of
the past, when some of these towns were thriving. But the photos
are today, showing in some cases, that the town has fallen on hard
times and many people have left, sometimes leaving advertising
signs from yesteryear. The photos are a bit depressing and haunting
in some cases, and not really beautiful, but are truly journalistic
in their unique way of documenting and era gone and an era
passing."--Bonnie Neely "Real Travel Adventures"
"The last 150 years have been hard on small rural towns. The
incredible advances of the 19th Century had the dual effect of
dramatically reducing the number of people required to tend farms
as well as drawing those displaced former field hands towards
cities with blooming manufacturing bases. The result is a string of
small towns that have, undeniably, seen better days. And David
Wharton captures slices of this reality. Wharton is quick to
assert, however, that it's not quite so hopeless as all that...And
make no mistake: there is beauty in the desolation. A welcome home
sign for a local National Guard unit being blown violently by an
18-wheeler driving through a town in which it will not stop evokes
at once the history and the culture and the life of those towns we
all pass by on the freeway. Towns that will never be more than a
name on a sign to most of us but which are and have been home to
generations of Americans. Wharton shows a keen interest in
establishing that sense of place. A Burger King sign inviting
customers to 'Try Our New Bacon Swiss' across the street from a
plaque commemorating a Civil War battle is, undeniably, a
reflection of the South today. Small Town South captures this, and
many other moments, with clarity and insight and organizes the
pictures with thoughtfulness and intent."--Pelham Anderson "The
Planet Weekly"
"This limited-edition, horizontal-format book of photographs was
beautifully produced by George F. Thompson Publishing and created
by David Wharton (Director of Documentary Studies, Center for the
Study of Southern Culture, University of Mississippi in Oxford).
The author suggests viewing the photographs as a long poem in nine
stanzas, where each image relates to the next in ways that evoke
but may not build a narrative. The print format, where blank facing
pages alternate irregularly with single images printed on each
page, also helps to create a sense of slow rhythm. Wharton's
subject is the American South of small, empty towns, closely
observed and mostly without commentary. The only text is at the
back of the book, where each image is given its caption in a couple
of sentences or paragraphs, small nonfiction stories about each
place. The black-and-white images, of storefronts, signs, roads,
and frame houses, have a flat clarity; they could be paintings or
photojournalistic moments in which no drama is happening except
what is always there. There is an incidental figure, an occasional
old truck. His technique is to whisper rather than shout, and the
book rewards slow looking. What the photographer draws us in to see
has often been exploited for tragedy or kitsch, but Wharton is too
wise and too wry; he knows this territory far too well for such
easy commentary. Beneath what we thought we knew, he reveals a
hieratic landscape. In Cherokee, Alabama, beside a blank brick
building and an empty road, an unmarked sign says only, 'DANCE.'"--
"Book News, Inc."
"Wharton's images are deeply felt, and they compel deep
thought...The photographs include homages to history, as in the
antique locomotive in Amory, Miss., and the many memorials to the
war dead sprinkled throughout the book, along with newer
developments like the courthouse in Hamilton, Al., a pedicure shop
in Opelousas, La., or a meat store in Opelika, Al., startlingly
juxtaposed with religious signage...The small towns that Wharton
photographs often are places that are justifiably proud of their
athletic teams, their church groups, their commercial ventures or
their military units...Noting that most small towns I have visited
remain racially segregated, particularly in areas of housing and
some business districts, I asked Wharton if he concentrated on
shooting the downtown sections to avoid racial issues. He
acknowledges the predominance in the images of Confederate
monuments and businesses owned by the white power structure. Yet he
says that's what he found in the small towns, and that's what he
shot. This let-the-chips-fall-where-they-may attitude pervades the
entire book. It's part of what makes 'Small Town South' so
unsettling."--Ben Windham "The Tuscaloosa News"
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