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Working Hands
by Rick Williams
". . . blends powerful images and words, while concurrently examining social, ethnographic, economic and cultural issues. The images are memorableeven indelible. The essays are engaging as they are reflective and add a special dimension to the photography."Professor Bill Ryan of Visual ResourcesHands on the saddle tamed the land. Hands on the pump jack tapped the vast resources beneath the land to bring new wealth. Now latex-gloved hands work in sterile clean-rooms, built on but isolated from the land, to make the microcomputer parts that take Texas and the rest of the world economy into the twenty-first century. Hands at work—the lifeways of the people. In more than seventy stunning photographs Rick Williams portrays the daily lives of Texans at work in the industries that comprise the three economic pillars of the state.
Ranching, oil, and now microcomputer technology have formed the backbone of the Texas economy and shaped the culture for at least the last hundred and fifty years. As different as the three industries and the people who work in them may seem, many factors link them, as Williams's photography dramatically and often hauntingly illustrates.
The vibrantly reproduced duotones in this volume show people at work and at play—herding cattle, pulling pipe, and wearing “bunny suits” to process microchips. With effective documentary techniques, Williams provides portraiture and action shots that portray the kinds of people who work and the kind of world in which they labor. Grace and power, communication with animals and humans, evolving interactions with machines, geographic loneliness, and sterile isolation are themes running through his pictures, which effectively capture the play of light on the forms and character.
Williams offers a compelling visual exploration of the continuity and change, similarities and contrasts of these three ways Texans have stood on common ground.
RICK WILLIAMS has been a lecturer in both photojournalism and visual communication at the University of Texas and is a commercial and documentary photographer in Austin. His work has been exhibited extensively in Texas, Mexico, and South America and has been published in two photography books. His photographs are held in many permanent collections, including the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the Humanities Research Center, Austin; and the Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth.
Number Eight: Clayton Wheat Williams Texas Life Series
Working Hands
0-89096-955-8
$45.0011x10. 132 pp. 72 duotone photos.
Photography. Texana.NOVEMBER
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