Showing posts with label Maynard Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maynard Jackson. Show all posts

Saturday, August 11, 2018

Oakland Cemetery Photography Workshop

My first published photograph was in my senior year in high school in the largest newspaper in the state, on the other side of the state where I lived. I'd moved away from home on the East Coast and finished high school in Wyoming. Other than what my art teacher, Duane, taught me about photography when I was on yearbook staff, I've never had an actual photography class. I've picked up tips from others, learned a lot on my own, and have taken a webinar or workshop from time to time, but that's it.


Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor
Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor

These photos are from a Photography Workshop I went on not too long ago at Historic Oakland Cemetery, a stunning, picturesque example of a "rural garden" cemetery in the 19th century. 

Some think it's creepy to host events in a cemetery. I think they've watched too many zombie movies. There was a time when the only public land in small towns was the local cemetery, so it became a gathering place where citizens would socialize and honor their dearly departed. Nothing creepy about that! 


Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor
Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor

There's another Photography Workshop coming up at Oakland Cemetery later this month! Sunset is the BEST for beautifully dramatic photos. The golden hour, it's called.


Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor
Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor

Oakland Cemetery dates to 1850 and started with only six acres. Today, it's 48 acres and is home to approximately 70,000 "residents", about the same number of spectators you'll see at an Atlanta United game in Mercedes-Benz Stadium!


Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor
Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor

Among it's 70,000 residents, Oakland Cemetery is the final resting place of a few famous personalities and notable citizens, including Margaret Mitchell, author of Gone With the Wind; Bobby Jones, golf legend; and Maynard Jackson, the first African-American mayor of the City of Atlanta.


Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor
Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor

There are many different tours of Oakland Cemetery. You could go all year and not take the same tour twice! To name a couple, there are the Sites, Symbols, and Stories tours and the Music Makers tours!


Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor
Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor

And there are many different annual events at Oakland Cemetery, including Tunes from the Tombs, Malts & Vaults of Oakland, and the Run Like Hell 5K, to name a few.


Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor
Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor

It's also a lovely setting for an evening stroll, camera or not, before or after dinner, perhaps. There are numerous nearby dining destinations, many flanking the cemetery including Six Feet Under Pub & Fish House, Tin Lizzy's Cantina, and Agave.


Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor
Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor

Locals love Oakland Cemetery for its beauty and events and visitors love it for its beauty and its celebrity residents. It's a magnificent piece of historical significance and it's a celebrated icon. I for one hope the art, architecture, history and gardens at Oakland will be around eons.


Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor
Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor

That first published photograph was of a toy drive for Toys for Tots. It was published in Wyoming's largest newspaper in Cheyenne, where I'd never even been. It was a journalistic shot, a career path I did not pursue, however, in Corporate Communications, my eventual career path, photography has become a cornerstone in what I do.


Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor
Photography Workshop at Historic Oakland Cemetery | Photo: Travis S. Taylor

After high school graduation, I returned to the East Coast, but a month later I moved back to Wyoming to live with my art teacher and his wife, Pip, for the summer. On their goat ranch, we'd get up every morning at 5:30am to milk their 40 goats, I learned how to bake, I jogged a lot getting ready for boot camp in the U.S. Navy, enjoyed an ample amount of MTV in its infancy, and there were many more photographs. 

I am ever grateful to Duane and Pip for their hospitality and for their generous contributions in shaping my future.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Historic Oakland Cemetery...Honoring Life

Historic Oakland Cemetery
Historic Oakland Cemetery
When you drop names like Margaret Mitchell, Bobby Jones, and Maynard Jackson in the same conversation, most Atlantans will immediately know you must be talking about Historic Oakland Cemetery, one of the most remarkable Victorian Rural Garden Cemeteries in the country.

What started as an answer to an outgrown municipal graveyard in downtown Atlanta, has grown from an original six acres to its current 48 acres. Historic Oakland Cemetery is Atlanta's oldest landmark in continuous use and is on the National Register of Historic Places.


Today, the Cemetery, established in 1850, is home to approximately 70,000 dead, including 7,000 Civil War soldiers...and Oakland still holds approximately 15 burials per year.


However, the Cemetery is touted as "much more for the living than the dead." While it—the Oakland Historic Foundation—absolutely respects the dead, its mission is "to cultivate resources to assist the City of Atlanta in the preservation, restoration and beautification of Historic Oakland Cemetery and to promote it as a local cultural resource and as an historic site of national importance."


Embracing that spirit, I've long wanted to visit Historic Oakland Cemetery, but (embarrassingly) just recently made it there. I'm so glad I did!


I had the great fortune of a friend knowing one of the tour guides, Kimberly, who gave our group of eight a captivating, detailed, and engaging walking tour of the Cemetery. The Cemetery is open to the public 365 days a year, but I highly recommend a Guided Walking Tour, at least to initially get oriented to the Cemetery for subsequent visits.


Usually, when a tour concludes, I have a mental list of about a bazillion questions I want answers to...not the case with Kimberly's tour. Our brains were saturated with names, dates, facts, factoids, and a new passion for what a Cemetery of this kind has to offer. She was brilliant!


Here are a few photos of highlights and other things I found of interest...



Historic Oakland Cemetery, Neal Monument
Historic Oakland Cemetery,
Neal Monument
If I remember correctly, the Neal Monument is one of the most photographed grave sites in the Cemetery. And a LOT of symbolism was explained, including the open book, closed book, laurel wreath, palm branch, and Celtic cross (that one being "eternal life, faith and redemption"). There truly is a lot of symbolism throughout the Cemetery...a LOT!

Historic Oakland Cemetery, The Lion of Atlanta
Historic Oakland Cemetery,
The Lion of Atlanta
A very popular Atlanta icon is "The Lion of Atlanta", a memorial erected by the Atlanta Ladies Memorial Association to honor approximately 3,000 unknown Confederate dead. Many of the Confederate graves are unmarked because the materials used to mark them have since degraded.

Of note, this monument is so popular and written about, when I blogged about the lions perched in front of the Marriott Marquis, it had taken months of research before I learned that they bear practically the same name, but in French—Les Lions d'Atlanta! And for quite a different reason.


Historic Oakland Cemetery, Golf Legend Bobby Jones
Historic Oakland Cemetery,
Golf Legend Bobby Jones
Atlanta-born, World Golf Hall of Famer, Bobby Jones was laid to rest at Historic Oakland Cemetery in 1975. His plot is a golfing green and if you look closely enough, you can see a hole that visitors use for putting to honor Jones. Fans also very often leave golf balls and other golf memorabilia at the site.


Historic Oakland Cemetery, the Jewish Section
Historic Oakland Cemetery,
the Jewish Section
For many reasons, too numerous to explain here, the Jewish section of the Cemetery is separate from the vast majority of the rest of the Cemetery. And it's stunning. There is also an earlier Jewish section, apart from the one pictured here, that more closely resembles non-Jewish grave sites. Learn more on the tour!
Historic Oakland Cemetery, Atlanta Skyline
Historic Oakland Cemetery,
Atlanta Skyline

Historic Oakland Cemetery, Atlanta Skyline
Historic Oakland Cemetery,
Atlanta Skyline

Historic Oakland Cemetery, Atlanta Skyline
Historic Oakland Cemetery,
Atlanta Skyline
I'd have to write a book to tell the tales of all there is to see in Historic Oakland Cemetery. Again, I highly recommend a Guided Walking Tour...you'll be amazed at how much you learn about Atlanta—and yes, that goes for you local tourists, too!

Head over to the wanderlust ATLANTA Facebook Page for more photos of my visit to Historic Oakland Cemetery. 


Historic Oakland Cemetery, at Sunset
Historic Oakland Cemetery,
at Sunset