James R. Southard, Heifer, 2018, digital photograph, 15.75 x 22.5 inches

Exhibitions: James R. Southard KY

James R. Southard
Why Buy the Cow
October 7 - November 14, 2020

James R. Southard, Heifer, 2018, digital photograph, 15.75 x 22.5 inches

James R. Southard, Heifer, 2018, digital photograph, 15.75 x 22.5 inches


James R. Southard
Why Buy the Cow

October 7 - November 14, 2020
Institute 193, Lexington

For the past few years, James R. Southard has spent his summers in Johnson, Vermont documenting the daily life of small-scale dairy farmers. The photographs in this exhibition focus on the Rankin Family and tell a familiar story about the collapse of the dairy industry in the region: large, automated, and heavily-mechanized operations systematically undercut local farms, leading to the closure of the majority of artisanal operations and increased suicide rates amongst the farmers. In the process, many multigenerational dairy farms are forced to sell their land at a loss, if selling is at all possible, transforming the regional geography of land and agricultural stewardship.

Southard’s photographic style walks a fine line between documentary and staged photography. Both rooted in longstanding tradition, each discipline utilizes a different approach to storytelling: in a staged photograph, the photographer intentionally sets the scene to tell a preconceived narrative, whereas documentary photography often relies on capturing an unaltered moment in time. By utilizing a mixture of documentary photography and staged portraits, Southard poignantly suspends his subjects in a magical reality. He uses his camera to tell a story essential to the livelihood of these farmers, offering the viewer a glimpse into their disappearing way of life.

James R. Southard is a Senior Lecturer of Photography at the University of Kentucky. His photography concerns agricultural communities in rural Kentucky, Wyoming, Maine, and Vermont. He is currently photographing farmers across Kentucky through a virtual residency with the Joseph A. Fiore Art Center in Belfast, Maine. Southard’s project in Vermont was made possible by help from the Great Meadows Foundation, Vermont Studio Center, the School of Art and Visual Studies at the University of Kentucky, and the Food Connection. Proceeds from this exhibition will be equally shared and donated to the Northeast Organic Farming Association of Vermont.

Press:
UK Photography Lecturer’s Exhibition Examines Dairy Farmers’ Struggle by Hayden Gooding, UKNow, November 10, 2020

Exhibit By James Southard, Why Buy the Cow by Kathy Black, Vermont Studio Center, October 20, 2020

James R. Southard, Ila with Calf, 2018, digital photograph, 25.5 x 25.5 inches

James R. Southard, Ila with Calf, 2018, digital photograph, 25.5 x 25.5 inches

James R. Southard, Trust, 2018, digital photograph, 32.5 x 23.5 inches

James R. Southard, Trust, 2018, digital photograph, 32.5 x 23.5 inches

James R. Southard, Warren (farmer), 2018, digital photograph, 27 x 18 inches

James R. Southard, Warren (farmer), 2018, digital photograph, 27 x 18 inches

James R. Southard, Horse & Buggy, 2018, digital photograph, 19.5 x 19.5 inches

James R. Southard, Horse & Buggy, 2018, digital photograph, 19.5 x 19.5 inches

James R. Southard, Tara and Warren Jr. (mother and son), 2018, digital photograph, 34.5 x 34.5 inches

James R. Southard, Tara and Warren Jr. (mother and son), 2018, digital photograph, 34.5 x 34.5 inches

Installation view

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Installation view