McKinney, Rhondal
American, b. 1948
In the midst of an epidemic of family farm foreclosures in 1985, the Focus Infinity Fund sponsored Rhondal McKinney, Tom Arndt, and Archie Lieberman to photograph small farms in the Midwest for the documentary project Farm Families. McKinney's photographs portray the farmers and their families in a series of panoramic portraits, each created by joining three to five contact prints made from 8x10 negatives. Collectively, the fragmented panoramas accentuate the expansive space that characterize these farmlands, but McKinney uses the multiple negatives to compartmentalize different parts of the image. In many of the photographs, he situates the family in the central frame of the panorama, composing what could stand on its own as a tightly framed portrait. The adjacent negatives depict the land as it spreads out around them, views of wide open fields or an extensive yard around a two-story house. Each frame of the panorama is enclosed by a black border though, creating internal divisions within the compiled image and effectively cutting off the subjects from their surroundings. At the broadest level, McKinney's project created a record of family farms at a time when their future seemed uncertain, while the way he uses multiple negatives to divide up the space suggests the looming threat of losing one's land.
Rhondal McKinney received an MFA in Photography from the University of Illinois (1981). He has had solo exhibitions at the Art Institute of Chicago; Roanoke College, Roanoke Virginia; University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and other institutions. His photographs are held in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Art Institute of Chicago; and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. McKinney co-curated the 1983 exhibition An Open Land: Photographs of the Midwest: 1852-1982 at the Art Institute of Chicago, along with the museum's Curator of Photography, David Travis. McKinney taught at Illinois State University beginning in 1983, where he also served as the director of the Rural Documentary Collection, an archive of photographs depicting social conditions in the rural Midwest. He is now professor emeritus of photography.
American, b.1895, Hoboken, NJ; d. 1965
American; John Shimon b. 1961, Julie Lindemann 1957-2015