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The Porch Project is the culmination of a three year visual documentation series based on the importance of porch culture and Creole lifestyle in New Orleans, Louisiana. Compiled into a photography coffee table book for New Orleans lovers and porch lovers alike, it's a glimpse into the spirit of contemporary New Orleans community and lifestyle.
Porch Portraits is the culmination of a three year visual documentation series based on the importance of porch culture and Creole lifestyle in New Orleans, Louisiana. Here it is, compiled into a photography coffee table book for New Orleans lovers and porch lovers alike.
Porch Portraits is the culmination of a three year visual documentation series based on the importance of porch culture and Creole lifestyle in New Orleans, Louisiana. Here it is, compiled into a photography coffee table book for New Orleans lovers and porch lovers alike.
The best of contemporary New Orleans architecture. From commercial buildings to residential dwellings, this pictorial guide compiles descriptions of more than eighty architecture projects from the last fifteen years. Establishments include Octavia Books, the Ogden Museum of Art, and the Cotton Mill.
Porch Portraits is the culmination of a three year visual documentation series based on the importance of porch culture and Creole lifestyle in New Orleans, Louisiana. Here it is, compiled into a photography coffee table book for New Orleans lovers and porch lovers alike.
The Front Porch Project book will include more than 800 families photographed during the shelter-in-place ordinance for Baton Rouge, starting in late March 2020 and continuing through June. The pages will also include photos Jenn took for The Store Front Project and her Halloween edition of the project. The photos are accompanied by a series of stories and thoughts from project participants, recounting their Covid-19 pandemic experiences and importance of supporting local businesses in the area. Jenn also shares her memories and stories from throughout the project, offering an insider's view of how the project began, the logistics and layers it took to pull it off, and the power and support it created in the community.
When the levee system protecting New Orleans failed and was overtopped in August 2005 following the arrival of Hurricane Katrina, 80 percent of the city was flooded, with a loss of 103,000 homes in the metropolitan area. At least 986 Louisiana residents died. The devastation hit vulnerable communities the hardest: the elderly, the poor, and African-Americans. The disaster exposed shocking inequalities in the city. In response, numerous urban plans and myriad architectural projects were proposed. Nearly nine years later, debates about planning and design for recovery, renewal, and resilience continue. This bold, challenging, and informed book gathers together a panorama of responses from writers, architects, planners, historians, and activists-including Mike Davis, Rebecca Solnit, Naomi Klein, Denise Scott Brown, and M. Christine Boyer-and searches for answers to one of the most important questions of our age: How can we plan for the urban future, creating more environmentally sustainable, economically robust, and socially equitable places to live? A 2014 grant from the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts supported in part the publication of this book.
Between the World Wars, New Orleans transformed its image from that of a corrupt and sullied port of call into that of a national tourist destination. Anthony J. Stanonis tells how boosters and politicians reinvented the city to build a modern mass tourism industry and, along the way, fundamentally changed the city's cultural, economic, racial, and gender structure. Stanonis looks at the importance of urban development, historic preservation, taxation strategies, and convention marketing to New Orleans' makeover and chronicles the city's efforts to domesticate its jazz scene, "democratize" Mardi Gras, and stereotype local blacks into docile, servile roles. He also looks at depictions of the city in literature and film and gauges the impact on New Orleans of white middle-class America's growing prosperity, mobility, leisure time, and tolerance of women in public spaces once considered off-limits. Visitors go to New Orleans with expectations rooted in the city's "past": to revel with Mardi Gras maskers, soak up the romance of the French Quarter, and indulge in rich cuisine and hot music. Such a past has a basis in history, says Stanonis, but it has been carefully excised from its gritty context and scrubbed clean for mass consumption.