Monday, February 21, 2011

Gary Indiana: Abandoned, Burned Out, and Gang Controlled


Nearly a year ago Matt Messner and I made a number of images on Easter Sunday in two abandoned churches in Gary, Indiana.  Some of you may be familiar with the images, there were a couple of shows in Chicago that featured the work.  As the darkest part of winter is now behind us I am again drawn to that city to make a new series.

These were the postcard invites to the first show which contained exclusively work from that Sunday.
The trips to Gary now date back more than 4 years, each trip we have made brings us new finds and changed architecture and environments.  We started with the more dramatic buildings that invited us in with gaping holes in their walls, the large factories, theaters, and cathedrals.  As the years passed we started expanding our radius from the main drag downtown, Broadway.  We began to find burned out buildings, streets of derelict homes, and various other products of a greatly shrunk population.

This weekend I spent a number of hours documenting the rampant abandonment of homes in and around downtown Gary.  I begin to form a typology of average Gary dwellings.  Some have been burned so badly that the roof simply is gone, some are tagged with the gangs that control the blocks they are on such as the "8th Block Vicelords".  Dozens more have simply been left to rot, vandals have torn doors off and shattered windows to strip out any valuables.  Here are some images from the first of hopefully many fruitful excursions to Gary.


The snow seems to have rearranged the front awning here.























Other typologies have undoubtedly been made in cities such as Detroit and Flint, Gary needs documenting.  I find a terrific sense of wonder and astonishment at these homes.  The American dream, left with doors open and windows smashed.

Tom Harris

14 comments:

  1. that house with the awning sitting on the porch is outrageous. looks like a gordon matta clark image....nice work.

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  2. I grew up in Gary. What's more remarkable than the ruins is the hope that still survives in the people that still live there. Next time look for joy in the Miller neighborhood instead of devastation downtown.

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    1. I AGREE WITH ANONYMOUS. YOU CAN LOOK AND SHOW THE CRAP BUT ALSO THE HOPE OF PEOPLE (Not all are in Gangs) THAT, FOR LOT OF REASONS, STILL LIVE IN GARY.

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  3. Miller is no better than Gary.. theres nothing in either part of town.. the people in gary just are content to live in a poor run down area.. if u disagree answer this question... If i back to gary and i build a house, what can i buy new in gary to furnish my house? I know what i cant but in gary..washer,dryer,microwave, hell anything that belongs in a house outside lil stuff like salt shakers..cant even buy a car in gary..u have to go to thr outskirts to buy anything which also includes food

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  4. The reason some people still live in Gary is because of section 8 cheap rent don't act like people live there because its a great city. Plus all the free housing smh there is no hope in Gary and Ilived and worked in that hell hole.

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  5. you show only the ugly none of the beauty that is still there!!!!!

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  6. It amazes me that you hope that more touring of Gary will produce more horrible pictures of a city dying. How about you use your blog to resuscitate a city that was once song about? This is a slap in the face to all the hardworking people of Gary and to continue to do it is the equivalent of kicking those people while they're on the ground then spitting on their graves.

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  7. I STILL LIVE HERE DONT JUDGE A PLACE THAT U ARE SCARED OF. THERE ARE STILL SOME GOOD PRODUCTIVE PEOPLE LIVING HERE . PEOPLE THAT ACTUALLY CARE ABOUT THIS CITY.

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  8. I find the same sense of wonderment in the photos as the artist. Sure, there is always good in the tragic. But people need to see the tragic, so they can enact change.

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  9. Nice work. The sad needs to be seen. Why hide the scars?

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  10. There IS a lot of abandonment in Gary (180,000 people c.1970 shrunk to 80,000 in 2010), but there are still some beautiful homes and buildings; and pride too. I understand the draw this city represents for urban explorers, photographers and social scientists, but I for one would love to see a contrasting piece, showing the homes in good hands. I concur that the Miller area of Gary would be a good place to start.

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  11. I find the whole scenario fascinating, eerie and incomprehensible! Bobby, New Zealand.

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  12. it sure doesn't look any worse than Mckeesport did when I moved in 20 years ago. It has improved. Now it looks as good as what you show.

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  13. These pictures kinda have me in a state of mind that I can't really explain. I see familiar places that remind me of the many great times that I had in Gary as a child. Although these pics show the saddens of what has happen to Gary over the years it also remind me of the good times I had in some of the place shown. I grew up in Gary and I am always proud to say I am from the GI. I was in Gary this past summer and rode through some neighborhoods I remember and was sadden but what made me smile was those that are still in Gary and still smiling and at that point I no longer was sadden as much as I initially was. I lived off of 27th and Pennsylvania street from 3rd grade to beginning of 6th, we then moved to Miller where I lived off of Lake street by the beach. Today there are beautiful pictures that you can take that also show the beauty and peacefulness of the Dunes in Miller. I appreciate the pictures because I can see the now but I'm also remind of my wonderful past although there are two different views that I see in each pic. I see what is before me in that pic but seeing the pic take me back to a place that will always be in my heart no matter how it look today. Gary is like a beautiful lady that has lost her figure over time but almost everybody still love her just the same.

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