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    The installation of "Honoring America's Coal Miners" at Georgetown College's Cochenour Gallery. Photos by Thorney Lieberman.

    The installation of "Honoring America's Coal Miners" at Georgetown College's Cochenour Gallery. Photos by Thorney Lieberman.

    Thorney Lieberman spent years in New York trying to shoot architectural images of the city that replicated the experience of being in the presence of the actual objects.

    “I had this idea if you looked out a 50- by 60-inch window, you should be able to replicate that experience of seeing what you see out of that window,” Lieberman says.

    Coy and Carrisa is one of the images in Lieberman's exhibit.

    Coy and Carrisa is one of the images in Lieberman's exhibit.

    But it never quite worked. “I never quite conquered the scale of New York ­architecture,” Lieberman says.

    But he has with coal ­miners, and that is the major point of his exhibit, Honoring America’s Coal Miners, which is at Georgetown College’s Cochenour Gallery through Oct. 7.

    By creating life-size, ­detailed portraits of miners, Lieberman wants to put a human face on coal ­mining, which he thinks is often ­written off as a faceless industry.

    Lieberman has come to ­regard the miners as ­“American heroes, engaged in dangerous work to supply us with energy,” he says in his artist’s statement.

    The project began ­after ­Lieberman moved to ­Charleston, W.Va., where his wife, Anne, grew up. They were just settling into the Mountain State when the Sago Mine disaster of Jan. 2, 2006, took the lives of 12 miners.

    The event garnered national media attention for days, and Lieberman became aware, “This was the reality of West Virginia, and this was my community.”

    While living in Colorado, Lieberman had worked on a project creating life-size, sharply detailed portraits of Native Americans, and he ­decided he wanted to do something similar with ­miners. He went to the United Mine Workers office around the corner from his home to start looking for people ­willing to pose for him.

    For Lieberman’s style of photography, posing is not a small request.
    His life-size portraits are created from separate images shot on 8- by 10-inch film. For instance, Coy and Carrisa, a portrait of a miner and his daughter, is made up of 34 separate images.

    Lieberman’s camera is mounted on a 10-foot-tall frame that he moves down and across the subject’s body to photograph each part in 1-to-1 scale. That requires the subject to stand relatively still for 15 ­minutes, hit repeatedly with a flash that is “brighter than the sun,” Lieberman says.

    And we’re not talking models here. These were coal miners, right after work.

    “I told them not to ­shower or anything,” ­Lieberman said. “I wanted to show what they looked like after a day on the job.”

    To get to Greenwood Community Church, where Lieberman had set up shop, Coy had to ride from the mine in the bed of his pickup because his wife wouldn’t let him in the cab.

    The miners, he said, did very well during the process.

    “The people like these portraits because they are powerful, celebratory,” Lieberman says.

    He particularly likes the way the exhibit is set up in the gallery at ­Georgetown College because it is a ­corridor, “so when you stand in there, it’s like you’re surrounded by them. These are very intimate images, and you can inspect them even more closely than if you were standing with the person.”

    And that achieves ­Lieberman’s goal of ­confronting people with the human side of coal ­mining. That, he says, is even why several subjects were ­photographed with their children.

    Honoring America’s Coal Miners has drawn wide ­support from the coal ­industry. The ­International Coal Group and its vice ­president, ­general ­counsel and ­secretary, Roger ­Nicholson, who is a ­Georgetown alum, ­underwrote Lieberman’s exhibit at the college.

    In the midst of ­debate about energy policy, ­Lieberman is unabashedly aiming to tell a side of the coal story he thinks is not being heard, about the effects moving away from coal-based energy would have on miners and people in many ancillary businesses, and even another side of the mountaintop-removal story.

    “I want this exhibit to move out of coal ­country, where we’re kind of ­preaching to the choir,” Lieberman says. “I’d like to get this exhibit into ­Washington, D.C., where our lawmakers can see it.”

    And he wants to take documenting the coal ­industry further, into a book.

    The project’s Web site includes coal country images Lieberman has shot, and images in the mines above and below the surface.

    “When I started ­working on this, I knew I was ­entering a whole other world,” Lieberman says. “Being a photographer, that’s what you do: You’re thrown into situations to photograph, and you learn about those situations.

    “I’ll be working on this for a while. There’s a lot more to this story.”

    If You Go
    Honoring America’s Coal Miners: Portraits by Thorney Lieberman
    When:
    1 p.m.-1 a.m. Sept. 27; 7:45 a.m.-1 a.m. Sept. 28-Oct. 1 and 7; 7:45 a.m.-6 p.m. Oct. 2; 4:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Oct. 6; closed Oct. 3-5.
    Where: Georgetown College Cochenour Gallery, first floor of the Anna Ashcraft Ensor Learning Resource Center, Georgetown.
    Admission: Free.
    Reception: 5-7 p.m. Oct. 7. ­Thorney Lieberman will speak.

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One Response to “Thorney Lieberman’s portraits put a human face on coal”

  1. Go, Thorney, Go! Great job, great photographs, great presentation.
    I’m so proud of you.
    Love,
    Hookey

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About Rich Copley & Copious Notes

Raised by opera-loving parents in a rock ’n’ roll world, Rich Copley has parlayed his broad interests into his career writing about arts and entertainment. Since 1998, he has covered performing arts, film and faith-based popular culture for the Lexington Herald-Leader, the daily newspaper in Lexington, Ky. MORE | E-mail Rich


 

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