
Gas Flare Pit, Westhope, North Dakota (2007)
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Major Canadian & U.S. Crude Oil Pipelines & Refineries Map,
Westhope, North Dakota (2007) |
Approaching
Storm, Wayne Field, Westhope, North Dakota (2006) |
Golden
Opportunity, Westhope Senior Citizens Center, Westhope, North Dakota (2007) |
Heartland
Cafe, Westhope, North Dakota (2006) |

VFW Wall of the Dead, Westhope, North Dakota (2007) |
Wars
in the Middle East, rising gas prices and the change in the American
farming industry are just a few ways that diminishing oil reserves have
transformed our world. Through photographing the rapidly depleting oil
wells of Westhope, North Dakota that are owned within my extended family
in Seattle, Washington, I have begun to explore the future of oil in
this small town and the changes within this 550-person community as
the oil wells go dry.
Located six miles south of the Canadian border, Westhope
and its inhospitable landscape were orginally homesteaded in 1904. During
the 1950's, after the discovery of oil in neighboring Canada, oil was
found in North Dakota. Farm families who were previously dependant on
unpredictable crops have become millionaires. A landscape once covered
with farms is now peppered with oil rigs. As this non-renewable resource
is depleted, the descendants of these Midwestern farmers-turned-drillers
face the challenge of a dwindling livelihood. What will happen to those
that only have claim to the mineral rights, and what future is there
for those who have claim to the land? Fifty years after the first discovery
of oil, the landscape of Westhope is again transforming as the oil wells
are plugged and sunflowers, canola and other bio-diesel crops are planted.
The resulting series, Westhope: Above and Below, explores
and examines Westhope, its people, and its oil and bio-diesel fields
during the different seasons, searching for traces of the adaptation
of Westhope's industry and environment. This project deals with this
historical farming community's return to its agricultural roots and
the coexistence of these two seemingly contradictory industries.
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