High: 29° / Low: 13° — Dude Weather Subscribe to Secrets Minneapolis / St. Paul
Richard Johnson’s photos of weathered storefronts, thrift-store castoffs, and tattered religious iconography in northern Minnesota serve as an astute chronicle of the erosion of small Midwestern towns. He grew up in Cloquet, which he describes as “an OK place,” one with “a slightly higher-than-average number of churches as well as per-capita consumption of distilled spirits, and the distinction of lending its name to a big forest fire.” After developing a severe allergy to
Hendrickson's handiwork is a mélange of burlesque camp, cowgirl grit, and Victorian flourish. She's undeniably influenced by '70s pop design and '80s album covers, but this North Dakota girl also mixes in a frontier spirit straight out of a nineteenth-century Sears, Roebuck catalog. But make no mistake, the work has some bite: Hendrickson's all-American blonde pigtails are more Minnesota RollerGirl than Little House on the Prairie.
Spend a few minutes with photographer Dona Schwartz and you’ll start to see a bit of grandeur hiding beneath humble day-to-day routines. “I want to see what’s amazing that’s right under my nose,” she explains. “To me, that’s really compelling. But to photograph daily life, you have to first really see it. You have to be really quick and really observant.”