Photographer‘s Five Year Project Documenting Black Cowboys
A photographer spent five years capturing “America’s backbone,” modern cowboys in the South and southeast.
A photographer spent five years capturing “America’s backbone,” modern cowboys in the South and southeast.
In the photo series titled The New Black West, viewers are afforded a front-row seat to the captivating and robust legacy of Black cowboys and rodeos.
Long, scripted, single-take drone videos are becoming must-have shots for high-end productions, and HBO's series Hard Knocks has shared the latest: an impressive tour of the Dallas Cowboys NFL team's massive facility.
Join us as we take a nostalgic trip into photography's hey day. It's 1978, and you're a fly on the wall at Contact Press Images, working with world-class photojournalist David Burnett on a photo essay about the last traditional cattle drive.
Here's a behind-the-scenes look at how photographer Tomás Munita journeyed through the landscape of Patagonia in Chile to document the lives of bagualeros -- cowboys who make a living by rounding up feral livestock.