Baltimore, Maryland row homes soon to be demolished throughout the city in order to make space for residential developers. photographed in 2019. Digital photography revisited through alternative digital manipulation. This series serves as a collage ideated during the Global Pandemic of 2020 and Covid 19 mandatory stay at home order.
Baltimore, Maryland, home of “The Wire’ continues tearing down a little under 17,000 abandoned row homes after many decades of social decline in the inner city. Baltimore has planned a $94million project to tear down neighborhoods at a time of the 17,000 abandoned homes in various stages.
Of the 17,000 dilapidated deteriorating structures, more than 800 crumbling homes have been razed and turned into green spaces
The trash invested empty homes, riddled with asbestos and lead paint, came to symbolize the deep social divide in Baltimore
Areas are planned to be green spaces for now, but will be developed into new neighborhoods in the future.
Revisiting the photographs originally intended for a black and white collection during the Covid-19 Global pandemic acted as a connection to processing my personal grief and release of the loss of my father who passed away in the very beginning of the pandemic.
Baltimore, Maryland row homes soon to be demolished throughout the city in order to make space for residential developers. photographed in 2019. Digital photography revisited through alternative digital manipulation. This series serves as a collage ideated during the Global Pandemic of 2020 and Covid 19 mandatory stay at home order.
Baltimore, Maryland, home of “The Wire’ continues tearing down a little under 17,000 abandoned row homes after many decades of social decline in the inner city. Baltimore has planned a $94million project to tear down neighborhoods at a time of the 17,000 abandoned homes in various stages.
Of the 17,000 dilapidated deteriorating structures, more than 800 crumbling homes have been razed and turned into green spaces
The trash invested empty homes, riddled with asbestos and lead paint, came to symbolize the deep social divide in Baltimore
Areas are planned to be green spaces for now, but will be developed into new neighborhoods in the future.
Revisiting the photographs originally intended for a black and white collection during the Covid-19 Global pandemic acted as a connection to processing my personal grief and release of the loss of my father who passed away in the very beginning of the pandemic.