{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"Episode 56: A Rich Frishman picture isn't just a thousand words. It's a story unto itself.","description":"If a picture is worth a thousand words, some of Rich Frishman\u2019s photographs could be novels.&amp;nbsp; Frishman was a news photographer for The Daily Herald in Everett and was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize before he left to pursue freelance work.&amp;nbsp; He knows how to tell a story with a photograph, and he still sees and tells the stories of America through his camera lens.&amp;nbsp; Frishman has criss-crossed the country to chronicle its beauty and everyday life in his collections,  American Splendor and  This Land, and the guarded secrets in  Ghosts of Segregation.&amp;nbsp; The difference between Frishman and the rest of us who think we take good pictures is how Frishman considers his subjects.&amp;nbsp; He doesn\u2019t just pull over on the side of the road when he sees something interesting, snap a picture and move on. Before Frishman leaves on a trip, he takes a deep dive online into the surrounding area for other photo opportunities.&amp;nbsp; \u201cI get on Google Maps, ultimately get in the Google&amp;nbsp;car \u2013 not the auto-driving one, but the one you take on the&amp;nbsp;internet \u2013 and I see what is there now in this location, and is it something that hearkens back,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd then that\u2019ll lead me to something else.\u201d&amp;nbsp; Frishman was working on his  Ghosts of Segregation photos when a planned trip to Houston led him to research sites in and around Jackson, Miss., about 440 miles northeast of Houston.&amp;nbsp; \u201cThe Negro Motorist Green Book\u201d helped him cross-check his hunches on historically significant sites and showed him many more. In Jackson he found  the modest home where a white supremacist assassinated black civil rights activist Medgar Evers on June 12, 1963. Near Philadelphia, Miss., he found  the remote site where Ku Klux Klan members killed young civil rights activists  James Chaney, Mickey Schwerner and Andrew Goodman on June 21, 1964. Their bodies were found buried in an earthen dam.&amp;nbsp; \u201cThe Negro Motorist Green Book\u201d was essentially a AAA guide for people of color, Frishman said.&amp;nbsp; \u201cBack In those dark days, it was what you had to use to be safe if you were black,&quot; he said. \u201cOften I will use the term \u2018colored,\u2019 because in a lot of (white) communities it didn\u2019t matter if you were African-American or Asian or Hispanic or Native American. Now it continues that way with Muslim, LGBTQ, maybe even Democrat. I have been in many places where I have felt like I was the outsider. It\u2019s not a good feeling.\u201d&amp;nbsp; Frishman\u2019s images in Ghosts of Segregation touched a nerve with Sno-lsle Libraries Communications Director Ken Harvey, who lived in Jackson, Miss., in the 1960s and early 1970s.&amp;nbsp; \u201cThe work that (Frishman) had done on the Ghosts of Segregation and the images that he had selected really spoke to me, because in some way, they reawakened some memories of places and things that I had seen and experienced,\u201d Harvey said.&amp;nbsp; Harvey was taken by the power of the images and the power of the places in his own memories.&amp;nbsp; \u201cI often think of myself as an archaeologist, collecting data about our civilization because someday it\u2019ll be past,\u201d Frishman said.&amp;nbsp; Frishman certainly collects a lot of data when he\u2019s working.&amp;nbsp; Each one of his pictures is composed of dozens or hundreds of individual images that he shoots over several hours or days, sometimes even longer. The multiple images allow him to capture far more detail and light variations than a single image could ever convey.&amp;nbsp; Frishman assembles the digital images into one masterpiece.&amp;nbsp; The results are astonishing. There's no pixelation, no blur, no sign that the picture is stitched together from multiple images. Even when the picture is up to 12 feet wide. The photographs are so good they hang in museums in  Texas and Louisiana.&amp;nbsp; Some of Frishman\u2019s earlier work on American Splendor and This land does look like well\u00ad composed snapshots of roadside attractions, such as funky motels in  California and  New Mexico on old Route 66, or the curious  Big Fish Restaurant on U.S. 2 in Bena, Minn.&amp;nbsp; \u201cYeah, I was more sanguine then. Those were fun, but I realized I lost a lot of the love for doing that when, and this is my own outlook, but I\u2019m troubled by our politics,\u201d Frishman said. \u201cI\u2019m troubled by the continuation of segregation, whether it\u2019s the economic issues or the educational issues. So many different groups continue to live with the burden of being considered \u2018the other.\u2019&amp;nbsp; \u201cThat\u2019s what I\u2019m trying to eliminate. I want to spark a conversation with people I may never meet directly. These problems didn\u2019t end with the passage of any of the Civil Rights Acts. It certainly didn\u2019t end with the end of the Civil War or Reconstruction or the emptying of internment camps or the rescinding of the Chinese Exclusion Act. I mean, we just continue to lay this on everybody who is \u2018the other.\u2019 \u201d&amp;nbsp; The motivation for equality comes from Frishman\u2019s upbringing. While the Frishman family lived comfortably in Chicago\u2019s predominantly white suburbs, his parents were \u201cunabashed liberals\u201d who wanted their three children to value social justice.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; \u201cI was born in 1951,\u201d Frishman said. \u201cMy parents made it a point to familiarize us with people who were struggling \u2026 It was the early era of the modern civil rights movement. That ingrained in all three of us kids a sense of responsibility.\u201d&amp;nbsp; Frishman credits his father for instilling his sense of curiosity and an appreciation of architecture.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; \u201cHe told us the stories of the people who made these places,\u201d Frishman said.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; That continues to frame his photography.&amp;nbsp; \u201cI\u2019m quite driven by our relationships as human beings,\u201d Frishman said. \u201cMy fascination with these places I\u2019m now photographing really gets back to the people who populated these places and experienced so much, and for Ghosts of Segregation, the suffering and courage and struggle that people endured. Those are the aspects that compel me to photograph these places.\u201d&amp;nbsp; ","author_name":"Check It Out!","author_url":"https:\/\/podcast.sno-isle.org\/","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/14073008\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/505b33\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/content\/70558679"}