Kevin Jones, Mountains
Allison Ewing, Piedmont
James Hill, Coastal Plains
James Hill, Piedmont
James Hill, Coastal Plains
James Hill, Piedmont
James Hill, Piedmont
James Hill, Piedmont
Kevin Jones, Mountains
The ‘holler’ or ‘hollow’ is ubiquitous in the mountains of SW Virginia. These networks of narrow valleys between ridges form a central organizing principle in human settlement and are often associated with coal mining. In order to avoid going up and down the mountains, railroads (and later on, roads) followed the contours of the river bank and to this day allow for the export of coal from the Appalachian coalfields.
Kevin Jones, Mountains
Lines of ‘deforestation’ allow for electrical transmission lines to traverse the mountain ridges of SW Virginia. These long, impossibly straight scars cut across the landscape and mark an interruption in the pattern of native forest and rolling hills.
John Malinoski, Coastal Plains
John Malinoski, Coastal Plains
John Malinoski, Coastal Plains
John Malinoski, Coastal Plains
John Malinoski, Coastal Plains
John Malinoski, Coastal Plains
Helene Renard, Mountains
View of overlapping roof segments of the framers market shelter in Blacksburg
Helene Renard, Mountains
Detail of joint at farmers market timber structure