A Different Perspective

There is no straightforward path forward after a life is torn apart by a shooting. There is no simple solution to America’s unique problem of relentless gun violence. On both counts, the answer is full of nuance and complication.

This series of film photographs is similarly layered, each image a combination of two separate clicks of the shutter, carefully double-exposed by hand in the pitch-black of a traditional darkroom. One picture is placed atop the other and fused to create a single image.

Each captures the twin realities of the subjects in the way only a double exposure photograph could, creating dueling focal points to which the eye cycles back and forth.

It’s a surreal view of a nation unable to move on from its own cycle of gun violence.

A double exposure made from  headshots of Krista and Navada Gwynn layered with a photo of their daughters.

Krista and Navada Gwynn are seen with silhouettes of their daughters, Navada and Victoria. Their son Christian was killed in a drive-by shooting in Louisville, Ky., in 2019; Victoria survived a shooting two years later. The parents are consumed with worry about the safety of their surviving children.

A double exposure made from a headshot of Missy Jenkins Smith layered with a photo of her wheelchair.

Missy Jenkins Smith is layered with a photo of her wheelchair. She survived a school shooting in 1997 in Paducah, Ky., that left her paralyzed from the chest down.

A double exposure made from a headshot of Rev. Jimmie Hardaway Jr. layered with a photo of a parishioner bowing her head in prayer.

The Rev. Jimmie Hardaway Jr. looks out from the altar of his church in Niagara Falls, N.Y., as a congregant bows her head in prayer. After watching worshippers elsewhere be targeted, he now carries a pistol to services.

A double exposure made from a headshot of Rev. Stephen Cady layered with a photo of the sanctuary of Asbury First United Methodist Church.

The Rev. Stephen Cady, with the sanctuary of the church where he preaches in Rochester, N.Y. He rejects the proliferation of guns and says people of faith should look to the Second Commandment, not the Second Amendment.

A double exposure made from  headshot of Hollan Holm layered with a photo of a front door.

Hollan Holm is seated in a restaurant as his eyes are trained on the eatery’s door. He survived a school shooting a generation ago in Paducah, Ky., but the scars remain and he fears violence could visit him again.

A double exposure made from  headshot of Janet Paulsen layered with a photo of a driveway.

Janet Paulsen is seen with the driveway at her home, where her estranged husband shot her six times in Acworth, Ga. After he violated a protective order, deputies confiscated more than 70 guns, but left one in his pickup truck. He used it to ambush her.

A double exposure made from  headshot of Lonnie and Sandy Phillips, layered with a photo of the memorial to the victims of the 2012 mass shooting at a movie theater

Lonnie and Sandy Phillips are seen at a memorial for victims of a shooting at a movie theater that killed her daughter in Aurora, Colo. The loss spurred a decade-long trip by the couple to other mass shooting sites.

A double exposure made from a headshot of Navada Gwynn layered with a photo of her working on a tablet.

Navada Gwynn in two images: standing for a portrait, and working on her tablet at her Louisville, Ky., home. After her older brother was fatally shot and her sister survived a shooting, her parents pulled her out of school to keep her safe. The violence has left Navada shaken and anxious.

A double exposure made from a headshot of Sylvia Holm layered with a photo of an elementary school.

Sylvia Holm with her elementary school in Louisville, Ky. Her father survived one of America’s first mass shootings in a school and shooting drills have been a fact of life in her own childhood. She believes the burden falls on her generation to work to solve the country’s gun problem.

A double exposure made from a headshot of Barbie Rohde layered with a photo of Cody Lee Bowman's tombstone.

Barbie Rohde in Dallas at the gravesite of her son, who died by suicide. He was an Army sergeant who had lost much of his hand in a training accident. All he had ever wanted to be was a soldier.

show CREDITS
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Creative Direction
Darrell Allen
DEVELOPMENT AND DESIGN
Panagiotis Mouzakis
writing
Adam Geller
Matt Sedensky
Claire Galofaro
Maryclaire Dale
PHOTOGRAPHY
David Goldman
video
Allen Breed
David Goldman
Robert Bumsted
Brittany Peterson
Sharon Johnson
Matt Sedensky
TEXT EDITING
Anna Jo Bratton
Indira Lakshmanan
photo editing
Enric Marti
Dario Lopez
video PRODUCTION
Chris Hulme
Allen Breed
project management
Anna Jo Bratton
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