A Unique Slant of Light: The Bicentennial History of Art in Louisiana - (Page 314)

314 Search and Rescue on Humanity Street, 2005 Photograph Collection of David Rae Morris ART IN CONTEMPORARY LOUISIANA DAVID RAE MORRIS b. 1959, Oxford, England David Rae Morris is an art photographer and photojournalist who maintains a home and studio in New Orleans. His work focuses primarily upon Louisiana and neighboring Mississippi. His books include My Mississippi, with text by his father, Willie Morris, the acclaimed writer, editor, and novelist, and The Who Dat Nation at Vaughan’s Lounge, a collection of photos of Saints football fans who gather at a bar in his Bywater neighborhood in New Orleans. Morris documented the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina for more than five years with thousands of photographs. His documentation of the storm’s toll was featured in the solo exhibition Do You Know What it Means to Miss New Orleans? at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans in November 2005, and in a book published that year, Missing New Orleans. JRG http://www.knowla.org/entry.php?rec=1318 http://www.knowla.org/entry.php?rec=1318

Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of A Unique Slant of Light: The Bicentennial History of Art in Louisiana

A Unique Slant of Light: The Bicentennial History of Art in Louisiana

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