Forgotten – Photo 52 Project [Week 37]

Mari Ann said it best when she uttered, “When was the last time we had tater tots?” This, of course, should be a familiar site to anyone who has ever had to move an appliance. The years of looking casually around for witnesses and sweeping a fallen object under the stove had finally caught up to me. I had braced myself for the horror I would inevitably uncover and was actually expecting far worse. Remember everyone, just inches away from your seemingly spotless kitchen dwells a pile of hair, skin flakes, dust, food, and possible mouse skeletons waiting to be uncovered once you decide to improve your house.

Wires – Photo 52 Project [Week 36]

I had another 11th hour week on this one. On Monday night I found myself driving around town looking for something that would make a good photo. I went downtown but didn’t see anything jumping out at me. After giving up and heading back home, I saw a church all lit up and looking nice and churchy. I turned around and got out the camera and tripod and started shooting. It was a beautiful church but there was nothing interesting for a photograph that I could see. Disappointed, I went home and took the camera gear downstairs to edit.

Right as I hit the basement, I saw my pinball machine all opened up for a repair I worked on over the weekend. I knew then that I had a worthy subject for this week. There are wires, motors, solenoids, and subways everywhere.  A pinball machine is not like any other machine I have ever worked on. A computer hides most of its secrets under the cover of a microprocessor. With a pinball machine, the mechanisms that allow the game to run are visible to the naked eye. At first glance, the underside of a playfield appears chaotic. After you are forced to make repairs, it all starts to make sense and the whole thing seems a lot less menacing and much more elegant.

Closed – Photo 52 Project [Week 35]

I went to Chicago again for Labor day weekend. There is no shortage of beautiful things to photograph there. On Sunday, I captured some great photos of adorable children playing in Crown Fountain, passionate musicians at the Chicago Jazz Festival, and a lot of wonderful architecture. That night, I went out alone to get a picture of the clock on the Chicago board of trade building, but on the way I saw a man in a wheelchair.

His head was down, parallel with the sidewalk below him. He was tucked into the most private corner he could find, facing inward like boy taking his punishment. He was sound asleep so I took my pictures a fast as I could and kept my distance as not to disturb him. It must be agonizing to have to sleep outside in a city where weekend murders can climb to double digits on a regular basis. I swear I have never hear a louder shutter from a camera before. I couldn’t have been in position more than 10 seconds before scurrying away to the comfort and safety of my 4 star hotel. While I slept comfortably, high above any problems below, he would stay there all night, vulnerable to whatever fate the city wanted to conjure up for him.

The next morning, I woke naturally, rested and refreshed. Upon venturing out again, this poor man was around the corner, not 30 feet from the spot he had just called home the night before. He was missing both legs from the knee down. The man was collecting money in a cup on the ground and I didn’t even throw a nickel. I walked past and tried not to make eye contact with the man who unknowing would be the subject of “Week 35 in Ryan’s photo 52 project.”