May 20, 2000/June 2, 2007
Left- 77-year-old cattle farmer Harlow Cagwin slumps over in his chair as he waits for his wife, Jean, to make lunch in their farmhouse kitchen.
Right- After a long day of play, Ben Grabenhofer naps on the kitchen table as he waits for the rest of his family to sit down for dinner in their Willow Walk subdivision home.
Common Ground follows two families living on the same plot of land, but many years apart. Juxtaposed photos limn the commonalities that bind these families across space and time. Longtime farmers Harlow and Jean Cagwin sold their land after decades of ownership, to a developer who turned it into a subdivision. Then the Grabenhofers, with their four young children, bought a home built on the site where the Cagwin's farmhouse once stood. Pulitzer Prize winning photojournalist Scott Strazzante captures the simple yet profound moments that show how these two families who seem to live worlds apart nevertheless share a common bond... a common experience... a common ground - as, indeed, we all do. Maybe more so than we realize. The book project has been published in National Geographic, featured on CBS Sunday Morning and made into an award-winning short by MediaStorm.
Common Ground follows two families living on the same plot of land, but many years apart. Juxtaposed photos limn the commonalities that bind these families across space and time. Longtime farmers Harlow and Jean Cagwin sold their land after decades of ownership, to a developer who turned it into a subdivision. Then the Grabenhofers, with their four young children, bought a home built on the site where the Cagwin's farmhouse once stood. Pulitzer Prize winning photojournalist Scott Strazzante captures the simple yet profound moments that show how these two families who seem to live worlds apart nevertheless share a common bond... a common experience... a common ground - as, indeed, we all do. Maybe more so than we realize. The book project has been published in National Geographic, featured on CBS Sunday Morning and made into an award-winning short by MediaStorm.
Common Ground 27
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Common Ground 27
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May 20, 2000/June 2, 2007
Left- 77-year-old cattle farmer Harlow Cagwin slumps over in his chair as he waits for his wife, Jean, to make lunch in their farmhouse kitchen.
Right- After a long day of play, Ben Grabenhofer naps on the kitchen table as he waits for the rest of his family to sit down for dinner in their Willow Walk subdivision home.
Common Ground follows two families living on the same plot of land, but many years apart. Juxtaposed photos limn the commonalities that bind these families across space and time. Longtime farmers Harlow and Jean Cagwin sold their land after decades of ownership, to a developer who turned it into a subdivision. Then the Grabenhofers, with their four young children, bought a home built on the site where the Cagwin's farmhouse once stood. Pulitzer Prize winning photojournalist Scott Strazzante captures the simple yet profound moments that show how these two families who seem to live worlds apart nevertheless share a common bond... a common experience... a common ground - as, indeed, we all do. Maybe more so than we realize. The book project has been published in National Geographic, featured on CBS Sunday Morning and made into an award-winning short by MediaStorm.
Common Ground follows two families living on the same plot of land, but many years apart. Juxtaposed photos limn the commonalities that bind these families across space and time. Longtime farmers Harlow and Jean Cagwin sold their land after decades of ownership, to a developer who turned it into a subdivision. Then the Grabenhofers, with their four young children, bought a home built on the site where the Cagwin's farmhouse once stood. Pulitzer Prize winning photojournalist Scott Strazzante captures the simple yet profound moments that show how these two families who seem to live worlds apart nevertheless share a common bond... a common experience... a common ground - as, indeed, we all do. Maybe more so than we realize. The book project has been published in National Geographic, featured on CBS Sunday Morning and made into an award-winning short by MediaStorm.
- Sales
- Transfers