blog

September 30, 2018

Soda and Cart

Haywood Street, downtown Asheville, North Carolina.

Soda and Cart

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The City

June 16, 2018

Blue Girl

Patton Avenue, Downtown Asheville, North Carolina.

Blue Girl

Blue Girl

All images © Joe Longobardi. All Rights Reserved.
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The City

April 23, 2018

College Street

Bikers making their annual Spring trek through Western North Carolina. Downtown Asheville, North Carolina.

Biker on College Street

All images © Joe Longobardi. All Rights Reserved.
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The City

August 25, 2017

Red

College Street, downtown Asheville, North Carolina.

Reds

Reds

All images © Joe Longobardi. All Rights Reserved.
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The City

August 15, 2017

Sorry

Pack Square, downtown Asheville, North Carolina.

This photo is from a series on images I had taken in the Spring of 2017. The gentleman on the left explained to me that he awoke that very morning with a realization―a paradigm shift if you will―about his old beliefs regarding race. With this new understanding, he fashioned a white robe out of old underwear to mimic that of a traditional Ku Klux Klan robe. The significance of the Vance Monument in the background (Zebulon Vance was a slave owner) was not lost on me, and in the series of images managed to capture both the monument and the gentleman’s interaction with people that passed by out of obvious curiosity. Needless to say, his garment caught many off guard, and went out of his way to explain the significance of his actions that day. The rather chaotically composed shot pictured here was caught as I was balancing my camera and another person’s smartphone who wanted me to help record an impromptu interview with the man.

These are small steps. But Progress has always been an ongoing process of participation.

Several other images from this encounter will be on exhibit in 2018 along with more of my photographs. I will announce details in the near future.

From a series of photos that will be on exhibit in 2018.

From a series of photos that will be on exhibit in 2018.

All images © Joe Longobardi. All Rights Reserved.
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The City

August 13, 2017

Skull

Downtown Asheville, North Carolina.

Skull

All images © Joe Longobardi. All Rights Reserved.
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The City

September 22, 2016

The City Streets In Autumn

Downtown Asheville, North Carolina.

The city streets in autumn

The city streets in autumn

All images © Joe Longobardi. All Rights Reserved.
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The City

January 26, 2016

30 Minute Limit

Patton Avenue, downtown Asheville, North Carolina.

30 Minute Limit

30 Minute Limit

All images © Joe Longobardi. All Rights Reserved.
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December 5, 2015

A Universal Language: Busking in Downtown Asheville.

Downtown Asheville, North Carolina.

To say that music is a ubiquitous and integral part of Asheville’s heritage is a little like pointing out that the ocean is wet. From bluegrass and folk, to rock, jazz and the blues, it was only a matter of time before all this vibrating energy would overflow from the mountains and local venues, and trickle into the eclectic streets of Asheville, fusing together a blend of rural and urban influences. And Western North Carolina itself is unique in its quilted history of Celtic ballads and African-American slave songs culminating in a crescendo of contemporary American music.

13 Strings and a 2 Dollar Bill, 2012

13 Strings and a 2 Dollar Bill, 2012

Annabelle, 2013

Annabelle, 2013

As with many street performers (or buskers, noun busk·er \ˈbəs-kər\: performers who entertain in a public place for donations), these musicians supplement their income by performing for tips offered by tourists and locals. Some use the opportunity to perform in the streets as a means to promote upcoming shows in local clubs or sell CD’s of their music. Others are merely passing thorough hoping to make a few dollars before moving on to their next destination. A rare few actually subsist on the income generated by these live performances.

Crow Quill Night Owls, 2013

Crow Quill Night Owls, 2013

Kjartan and Skogen, 2013

Kjartan and Skogen, 2013

Having been a performing musician myself, I’m always drawn to the talents I come across when downtown. I strive to take photos that I feel capture a timelessness, even some mythology, of the artist. I think back on iconic photographs of famous performers from the first half of the Twentieth-century that been branded into our cultural lexicon. At some conscious level, I am inspired to mimic these mental images while capturing these modern performers.

Headlining at the Flat Iron, 2012

Headlining at the Flat Iron, 2012

Daniel Rassum, 2009

Daniel Rassum, 2009

The music that emanates from the streets in random cycles is what makes up the character and is at the heart of busking in downtown Asheville. When the sidewalks are absent of music, the silence is both deafening and disconcerting.

Playing on Haywood Street, 2011

Playing on Haywood Street, 2011

Blues on Broadway, 2010

Blues on Broadway, 2010

Recently, there has been some debate by the Asheville City Council regarding the implementation of limits on the amount of sidewalk space buskers can have at their disposal. As a result of a number of transient activity in the last year, a number of regular street performers have been targeted by local authorities in a general sweep to curb sidewalk congestion, even ticketing artists that try to sell their CD’s (which though is not legal to do so, it was generally overlooked by the city of Asheville). The response by the busking community was the creation of the Asheville Buskers Collective that serves as a self governing agency, offering guidance in creating a professional atmosphere for all artists. As a result of the Collective’s efforts (attending city council meetings to voice concerns and suggestions), many of the restrictions that were to be implemented by the city have been taken off the table.

Sparrow, 2011

Sparrow, 2011

Officer Hotdog, 2013

Officer Hotdog, 2013

These images featured in this blog, my book, and those I have yet to publish have been collected over a period of nine years. On both film and digital cameras! Alongside capturing the musicians, I photographed many Living Statues that have come and gone over the years. Many of these performers will never be seen again. I feel fortunate to have been able to capture so many of the artists that have performed on the streets of downtown Asheville. How many performers have I photographed? Likely enough to post a photo of a unique busker everyday for the next several years.

A number of these photos are on display at Lenoir-University just off of Merrimon Avenue in Asheville, and can be found in my book Urban Photography From the Streets Of A Bohemian Mountain Town.

Playing at Pritchard Park, 2010

Playing at Pritchard Park, 2010

Since the days of antiquity, street performers have been the soundtrack to life in any city.

Without it, one’s step by misses a beat.

Ruby and Hunter, 2013

Ruby and Hunter, 2013

All images © Joe Longobardi. All Rights Reserved.
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July 13, 2014

Urban Photography From The Streets Of A Bohemian Mountain Town – Photography Exhibition and Book Release.

Urban Photography From The Streets Of A Bohemian Mountain Town

Urban Photography From The Streets Of A Bohemian Mountain Town

I will hold an exhibition and book release announcement this August at Grateful Steps Publishing House, Bookshop and Gallery for my upcoming street photography book entitled “Urban Photography From the Streets Of A Bohemian Mountain Town,The Art Of Performance. A Journal of Asheville Street Photography.”

The work incorporates a mix of photojournalism with a traditional approach to street photography. The book documents in both words and images the dichotomies and juxtapositions of an urban bohemian environment intertwined with a southern Appalachian culture. The collection focuses on the performance of living, creating, and being an “Ashevillian” in downtown Asheville. The exhibition will showcase photographic excerpts from the book, including street performers and daily life in the city.

The work will be available in both print and ebook. For information on the book, visit http://joelongobardiphotography.com/books.html

Grateful Steps is located at 159 South Lexington Avenue, Asheville, NC 28801. The exhibit will run from August 1 to August 30, 2014. Opening reception is on a Friday, August 8 at 6pm. All works on display are for sale.

For further information, visit GratefulSteps.org for updates of upcoming events, or contact Micki Cabaniss Eutsler at micki@gratefulsteps.org.

All images © Joe Longobardi. All Rights Reserved. joelongobardiphotography.com/

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