Kat Eye Studio

  • Home
  • Portfolio
  • Books
    • Art with an iPhone
    • Digital Photography for Beginners
  • Workshops
    • Mobile Photography Workshop Series
    • iPhone Art Workshop
    • Out of the Box Composition Workshop
    • Photography & Creativity Talks
  • Free Resources
    • Mobile Tutorials
    • Exploring with a Camera
    • Liberate Your Art Postcard Swap
  • Blog
  • About
    • Artist Statement
    • Background & Experience
    • Contact

June 25, 2014 by Kat

Telling Stories

I believe all photographers are storytellers. Whether we are telling the story of an event, of who someone is, or of beauty in the moment, every photograph is a story. As we put these individual stories together, they become the story of ourselves, the photographer. Where we come from, who we are interested in, what we see, how we choose to portray the world. Whether we realize it or not, we are in every photograph we create.

Returning from my family visit to Ohio, I realized that there is a story to tell in photographs that I haven’t told before. A story I was able to photograph for the first time since becoming an artist. In my few days there, I barely scratched the surface. I didn’t even really try to capture and tell this story fully, but I see it there, in the images I returned home with.

It’s the story of my family heritage on my father’s side: Amish.

20140625-063359-23639584.jpg

But it’s not just the story of “the Amish.” I’m not an anthropologist or historian, to chronicle the timeline or study the culture. I’m not a reporter, looking to get the inside scoop. It’s the story of my father, my family, me. I want to understand how it all fits together; how it influenced who I am.

20140625-064217-24137100.jpg

My father grew up Amish on a farm in Holmes County, Ohio. He was one of nine children: Eight are still living, seven are living in or near Holmes County, five remained Amish.

My Uncle Aden now owns the family farm, 155 acres in total, which includes 50 acres of woods, two farm houses, outbuildings, and a barn of which no one quite knows the age. My Uncle David estimates at least 150 years old.

20140625-065543-24943205.jpg

Growing up in Colorado, we visited every year or two. We were suburban kids getting the taste of a farm life for a quick week. My dad pitched in with the chores and we could tag along in the barn, as long as we stayed out of the way or helped our cousins. We might get to feed the horses, the giant draft horses that worked the field or the buggy horses, almost dainty in comparison.

20140625-070204-25324612.jpg

We might try milking a cow (by hand, at that time) or try to catch the wild barn cats who kept the rodent population in check. There were always adventures waiting in the barn, if you weren’t afraid to get dirty.

20140625-071330-26010927.jpg

Those memories are just echoes in my head now. There are no cows left on the family farm where my father grew up. The milking stalls are empty.

20140625-072703-26823889.jpg

The milk house is quiet. Left as if someone might come back, any moment, and start the operation up again. Maybe someday, one of my cousins or my cousins kids, will start farming here again.

20140625-071834-26314561.jpg

It’s a hard life, but an honest way of life. You think, looking in from the outside, that it is so different from our modern lives, but it’s not really. It doesn’t have to be. Living simply, working hard, enjoying family, creating community… We can all have these things whether we have electric lights or not. They are all choices.

My father chose not to remain in the Amish way of life, but he chose the things that mattered out of it. And each of us, me, my sister and brother, have that handed down to us as well. We get to carry that piece of the Amish heritage with us.

20140625-073513-27313404.jpg

This was the story that came out of my photographs. A tiny piece of who I am and where I came from. I didn’t know I was capturing this story, any story really, when I was there. I sometimes forget that my photographs are not of some random subject, but of me, no matter what thing is in them.

Looking at these images, I feel as if there are so many stories left, waiting to be captured. Waiting to be told. I feel a pull to go back, and explore these stories more.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Feel free to share!
  • Tweet

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: amish, family, Ohio, story

Comments

  1. Judy Hudgins says

    June 25, 2014 at 8:07 am

    Go back and take more pictures. If you delay, then people who can actually share what it was like will be gone and you will regret not going sooner. Capture those stories and write them down with the pictures for those who come after to enjoy and understand where they came from.

  2. Janice says

    June 25, 2014 at 11:26 am

    thanks for sharing a piece of your history with us. The images are wonderful, and inspiring.

  3. Jones says

    June 25, 2014 at 3:02 pm

    Thanks, Kat, for sharing!

    Just curious – have you seen Exposure.co yet? I’ve found it to be a great platform for telling photo stories (I’ve posted two over there so far) – and there’s a chance to try it without needing to pay a subscription fee (up to 3 stories).

  4. seabluelee says

    June 26, 2014 at 5:15 am

    Kat, there’s so much here. I agree with what Judy said. I wish I had talked with my father about his history while he was still alive (he had left home at 14 and never went back), but he was not a man one asked questions of. Or perhaps it was me — that I was too diffident to ask them. In any case, the opportunity is gone, much to my regret.

    Your images really do tell stories. I love the one of the inside of the old barn, with the light streaming through every crack, and of the boy and calf.

  5. Sandra says

    June 26, 2014 at 8:40 pm

    I loved all the pictures, Kat and also the stories they tell as you write about what they all meant to your father and his family and how the best parts have been handed down to you.
    Yes, pictures tell us stories if we care to hear!
    Have a wonderful weekend!

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Upcoming Events

Books Available

  Digital Photography for Beginners eBook Kat Sloma

Annual Postcard Swap

Online Photography Resources

search

Archives

Filter

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Upcoming Events

© Copyright 2017 Kat Eye Studio LLC