Lora Webb Nichols Set — Encampment, Wyoming + Heap-O-Livin’ (limited available)

Lora Webb Nichols Set — Encampment, Wyoming + Heap-O-Livin’ (limited available)

From the archive we selected a limited amount of the sold out book ‘Encampment, Wyoming’. These are for sale as a set with the new volume ‘Heap-O-Livin”. Sold on first come, first serve basis.
Encampment, Wyoming: 208 pages / 21,5 x 28 cm / Texts by Nancy F. Anderson, Nicole Jean Hill / edit by Nicole jean Hill / isbn 978-94-90119-89-8 / 2021 — Heap-O-Livin’: 192 pages / 21,5 x 28 cm / edit and text by Nicole Jean Hill / isbn 978-90-834510-9-1 / 2025

Encampment, Wyoming features Nichols’ own work and the images by amateur photographers she collected in the early 20th century as the proprietor of a photofinishing business in southern Wyoming. Culled from over 24,000 photographs, the book provides a dynamic visual window into the social, domestic, and economic aspects of the American Western frontier and captures an elusive sense of place through the images of this community of friends, families, and strangers.
Heap-O-Livin’ features a selection of images by Wyoming photographer and diarist Lora Webb Nichols (1883-1962). Nichols created and collected approximately 24,000 negatives and 65 years of diaries throughout her lifetime in the town of Encampment. In addition to the industrial and economic aspects of this sparsely populated ranching and copper mining town, Lora’s images and diaries documented the lives of the girls and women within private households.
Despite the inherent isolation created by geography, the long brutal winters, and the patriarchal ideology that undervalued the role of women in Encampment in the late 19th and early 20th century, a robust female-led community emerged that provided a network of spiritual and emotional support. This was cultivated through the habitual visitations of immediate and extended family and friends into each other’s homes during their transition from children to wives and mothers. In Nichols’ sphere, these visitations often involved the act of picture-making. Lora photographed their duties as mothers and homemakers but also made photographs that reveal the pleasure they experienced in simply being in each other’s company.

 175,00


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