This weeks Featured shop is MommieDawn: She has AMAZING photographs of the Kentucky Landscape. She has captured our beautiful state very well in her work. She is also an activist for changing the way we mine for coal. It is very destructive to the environment and has a lasting impact on nearby families. She has provided a link Ilovemountains.org so we can read up more on how this mining has such an impact on the landscape.
She was very happy to to be featured shop this week, I am very proud to have her on the team. We have so much talent here I am constantly amazed! Here goes the interview;
So Miss Dawn tell us a bit about yourself?? My mother is from Perry County, KY  and my father from Beckley,  WV so I am 100% Appalachian and  that is something I treasure.  I was actually raised in Frankfort, KY.  I adore Frankfort of course with its varied topography,  lush landscape, and colorful history.  But I have to admit I feel more of an  attachment to Eastern Kentucky where I spent  much of my time in Grapevine and Chavies near Hazard.  I think it was such an  adventure growing up, each time my mother, brother and I traveled the Mountain  Parkway and watched the land and roads change from the gentle hills of central  Kentucky to the foothills and then on into the beautiful green mountains that  were the backdrop for experiences that shaped our  lives.
   Ya got any kids? How is the family? I am now married with two children  and I hope I can give to them the chance to have a childhood as magical as  mine.  There’s will be spent traveling mostly to Shelby County, KY to see my  mother who has settled on beautiful forested property with a large pond and  their paternal grandparents who also have a forested retreat for them to  explore.
   If you have a day job tell us about it! I have been working in highway  design since I was 19 years old.  So that’s eleven years now,  wow!
    Tell us ALLL about your Art! My photography is an effort to tell  my story.  I have a photographic memory and make strong associations with my  visual and emotional experiences.  So every photograph in the collection that I  choose to share is offering something of me to the viewer.  I sometimes know  right away that a photo is perfect and that I want to share it.  Sometimes,  though, I am prone to ignoring a photo for a long time and then stumbling upon  it later only to realize it is stunning.  This initial overlooking is because I  need time to forget my emotional experiences when I was moved to photograph  something before I can let go of the fact that I may not have accomplished what  I wanted to with a particular shot.  And then, the beauty that is there can  reveal itself to me and I feel so lucky!
         I did not realize that my  photography told a story until I was considering moving beyond the joy of  privately collecting them and instead sharing them also with others.  At that  point I began to wonder how I would discuss them with others and I realized that  there is a tremendous focus on what moves me about Kentucky itself.  A  simple locust tree, considered a weed by some, is a glorious display, especially  when you find rows of them and it seems there are infinite delicate white blooms  dangling like wisteria.   Then there is my personal history as an activist  trying to help sound the alarm about what mountain top removal and valley fills  are doing to the Appalachian Mountains in Eastern Kentucky and West  Virginia.
          I remember when I was studying in  the library and heard some agricultural PhD students discussing their work and  doing flyovers of an area that they were monitoring.  They could not pronounce  the word correctly but I knew that they were talking about my Chavies!  I tuned  in and heard that there was this astounding amount of destruction visible from  the air and that from their perspective it was just pitiful, even laughable that  it had been allowed to happen.  And so that was my wake up call.  I heard then  that the University of Kentucky was going to sell some of the Robinson Forest in Breathitt County off to be mined in order to raise  money for a scholarship fund.  I got heavily involved in the fight to curb those  intentions.  It was clear that my people were being asked to choose between  pristine land (and I say this technically because there is a watershed that is  unscathed there by human activity and to say this is important would be an  understatement) and their children.  Let me reiterate my point, the people of  Eastern Kentucky, in this situation, were being told in essence, they had too  give up their land for their children’s educations.  When I made that point in  front of a panel of politicians I felt like an outsider as the mayor of a town  in an area I’d lay my heart and soul out for told me to go back where I came  from.  But two days later the politician who had started the inquiry into  selling the land changed his mind and said nearly verbatim what I had that day  in a newspaper article.  I knew at that point that I could make some tiny ripple  of an effect and I haven’t stopped trying to pay attention and do what I can  since.
  
 These days I am not a student, and  so I have no time for demonstrations and going door to door to affect policy.   But, I write my representatives every time I’m made aware of a vote that holds  promise for change.  And now I have a mission to share the beauty of the  Appalachian Mountains with art collectors and  hope that they’ll take an interest in the artist enough to discover that I am  praying they’ll notice that there’s an entire region wishing that the rest of us  would realize that our conveniences and cheap energy come at a huge cost.   Children die when boulders break free from mining jobs and land on their beds,  homes are literally knocked off their foundations and carried downstream when  impoundment ponds fail and release millions of gallons of toxic sludge so that  it can bury everything in reach and pollute the resources of untold numbers of  people.
  
  In a sense my photographs are just  pretty visions captured on film.  But I hope that the collection can become a  tribute to my ancestry and my descendants and chiefly, a visual stimulation of  empathy for the Appalachian region.  Too often we are presented images of  poverty, but that’s not the story I want to tell.  Our land is beautiful and  worthy of reverence.
  
 Any other hobbies? Among my other hobbies, I am a  knitter, one who is attempting to draw and paint from time to time, and I LOVE  graphic design, making invitations for events that are special and unique or ad  layouts, etc.  I owe an unending debt of gratitude to my mother for letting me  waste her materials while I tried to be as creative as she is growing up!!  I  hope to find what comes as naturally to me as so many things do to her.  I  remember when she taught me to draw each leaf on a tree instead of just the  outline of a canopy.  Watching her layout designs for things over the years…how  it all just flows from her, she’s definitely been the inspiration for exploring  this part of myself.
Thanks so much Dawn, this was a great interview! I can really feel you have so much passion for your work and its obvious thru your gorgeous photos.
  
You can click on any picture in the Etsy Mini to go to her shop. Thanks SO much Dawn for being my latest "Victim" ! Keep making those purty pictures!
 
4 comments:
Thank you Libby for the interview. Today I turned 30 years old!! So I feel extra special with all the attention, haha!! Take care everyone! If you visit my shop after reading this blog and make a purchase, please say so in the message to seller so that I can give you 10% off!!
Wow, what an interesting interview. I loved reading your story Dawn! I enjoy nature photography too so I can relate to how you feel when you capture the imagery of that very moment in time. Happy Birthday to you! I look forward to meeting you in a couple weeks!
Your photos are really beautiful, Dawn. Your shop gives everyone a chance to see how beautiful our state is. Happy 30th!
What a great interview! Dawn, your photography is lovely, and I really enjoyed reading about your crafting and causes! Happy Birthday as well!
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