The
The Gazz
November 16, 2006
Exhibit captures Cabin Creek
by Julie Robinson
for
the Gazette
Three years ago, 15 women
began taking photos and writing their thoughts about life on Cabin Creek.
The women wanted to
document the community’s strengths, history and challenges. Working through
The women, who ranged in
age from 14 to 69, took photos for a year, shooting trees, woods and scenic
landscapes. They shot their churches. They shot a family gathered at the dinner
table. They shot an abandoned coal-loading building, crumbling roads and an old
water tower half-obscured by vines and trees.
The best of those photos
were exhibited briefly in 2004 at the Sharon Church of God in Dry Branch. Now
Showcase West Virginia, at 906 Quarrier St., has chosen to bring back the exhibit for
its first show in its new Open-Ended Gallery.
The gallery is upstairs
from Showcase West
Like a lot of communities
in
Kathy Stout left Cabin
Creek as a newlywed and came back in 1997 when her husband, Owen, retired as a
probation officer in
She learned that Cabin
Creek had beautiful places and good people, said Stout, now 57 and married 37
years.
“This made us delve deeper
into ourselves to find out what we wanted to say,” Stout said. “We learned we
were better women than we thought we were. We all came away knowing we could do
things we didn’t think we could do before.”
Showcase
“The photovoice
project made them more articulate. Instead of saying the road is falling in,
they were able to take a photograph and take it to the state road people.”
Images will be on sale at
prices ranging from $7 for a 4-by-6-inch print to $58 for one 30 by 40 inches.
Photos with explanatory
words are available at prices ranging from $8 to $45.
Showcase
To
contact staff writer Bob Schwarz, use e-mail or call 348-1249.