After a short break from Instagram I'm happy to share a project:
The Star Partyers of New Mexico in @nytimes .
This is my first long-term photo essay since returning to NM, and I had the chance to meet amazing people across the state. I was reminded to not only appreciate the earth under our feet but to peer up with awe.
Thanks to @mcmarbled and @impofevol for the strong support - ya'll rock!
More photos from the project to come ~>
The story will be in print in tomorrow's Science section of The New York Times. This weekend holds the Lyrid meteor shower - send your gaze upward
Clear and dark skies ✨
Storage prices got out of hand. Musical drives to shuffle old work around and clear space. Deep in years of New York along the way. Ten miles on foot was easy work. Magical city.
More from these archives coming soon.
Decades of softball across the U.S. and Asia. One destroyed shoulder. Percy Reynolds traveled to Louisville to Norton Orthopedic Institute, one of only five places in the country doing this type of robotic shoulder replacement, and never looked back.
The robotic arm used gives surgeons a level of precision never seen before in the field, and patients are out of their sling in about seven days compared to the four to six weeks with traditional surgery.
Photos for @courierjournalphoto
Photographed the March issue of @newmexicomag Destinations section.
The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center @indianpueblo is celebrating 50 years as a gathering place for New Mexico’s 19 pueblos. Fifty years strong and still very much alive. Pick up the March issue on newsstands now. Thanks @jm_mccauley 👏🏼
Photographed for @propublica . Thanks for the call @cengizyar
Albuquerque’s Mayor Said Arrests Were “Not the Solution” to Homelessness. Yet Jail Bookings Have Skyrocketed. Story by Nicole Santa Cruz and Ruth Talbot, link in bio.
In Albuquerque, sidewalk obstruction charges jumped to 1,256 last year. Unlawful camping cases rose from 113 to 704. Nearly half of those booked into the county jail are now classified as homeless.
Citations turn into warrants. Warrants turn into nights in jail. Most people are released in less than 24 hours, back to the street, case still open. There are days when more unhoused people sleep in jail than in the biggest local shelter.