Somewhere along the back roads of small towns dotting the Louisiana
and Mississippi landscape is Jack Spencer, a self-taught photographer,
searching for beauty. Driving through forgotten towns, lush bayous,
overgrown cotton fields and visiting weathered porches filled with
the sound of authentic country blues, Spencer watches and listens,
always looking for that one moment, interaction or ray of light that
inspires him to take a picture. His photographs illuminate a singular
mood, person or place, exposing us to the raw beauty etched into the
faces and landscapes in the South, as he returns time and again to
his subjects, peeling away layers, offering us a glimpse at another
facet of their character.
From the moss hanging on Cypress trees in Tomotley, South Carolina,
to the crumbling ruins of an old church, to an abandoned tire swing
swaying in a humid breeze, Spencer's work emanates with the heat of
a southern summer where everything grows like wildfire and the air
feels like an extension of your skin.
These are but a few of Spencer's most notable images from Native
Soil, his first monograph, which solidified his place as one of the
most gifted photographers working today. Whether photographing people
or the landscape, Spencer manages to draw us in, searching for stories
in the silhouettes of children on a beach or the haunting eyes of
an older man staring directly into the camera.
Spencer continues this intimate vision in Mexico, a landscape similar
to the South, yet filled with a spirituality and religion all its
own. It is here, among the ceremonies, festivals and sun drenched
streets that Spencer has created his newest works, photographing everyday
heroics prevalent in ordinary life. It is here that Spencer captured
two Incas on stilts, silhouetted against a tumultuous sky; where he
caught a woman dancing in the sunlight as her veil lifts into the
moist air; where a dog wanders through the cobblestone streets searching
for food.
Throughout his travels, Spencer looks for the unexpected, waiting
patiently for images to emerge. In one image we see a woman walking
along an endless road, her broken umbrella shielding her from the
hot sun. In another we see three children with painted faces in traditional
costume, prepared to take their place in the Day of the Dead festivities.
In yet another we see a barren landscape, dark and foreboding, the
remnants of a past storm scattered along the horizon.
Whether traveling the roads of Louisiana, Mississippi or Mexico,
Jack Spencer is on an endless quest for beauty -- to capture small
moments and freeze them for all to wander into. It is here, within
his images, that we grasp his magic, as each image reveals its own
meaning. Spencer is an artist whose vision is unquestionable, as is
his commitment.