Aloha—
The following images are representative of my efforts as a documentary photographer. My work focuses on the intersections of global warming's consequences with place and social, political, and economic histories.
'What Remains of Paradise' was published in
Popula (
bit.ly/remains_paradise). 'Covid–19 in Waikīkī' was collected by The Autry Musuem of the American West as part of its documentation of the Coronavirus pandemic in Western states. The remaining work is unpublished or ongoing.
Published pieces representing other examples of my photography and feature writing can be seen at
bit.ly/waikiki_development and
bit.ly/cal_forests, both ran at the end of 2022. The first is an account of the capital-colonial development of the Ala Wai Canal which enabled the creation of the Waikiki tourist district (distinct from Waikīkī, the historic and cultural place) and the current social, economic, and ecological issues this construction manufactured. My Waikiki piece represents the first publishing of a photographer's work by
Lapham's Quarterly—an honor I am very respectful of. It is called 'I Am Empty Without You.'
The second piece linked above addresses the failure of California's forests, the causes of that failure, and what losing its forests of charismatic trees might mean to the state's identity—predicated as it is, in part, on its groves of majestic native tree species.
Places Journal published another piece close to my heart early last year; 'San Francisco: An Index of Influence' can be seen here:
bit.ly/sf_index. The story is an accounting of mundane locations in San Francisco which played host to significant, influential national events that struck echoes we encounter today.
I am happy to take on assignment work or work with editors who might want to develop a story together—as a photographer alone—or also utilizing my writing skills. I am a solid reporter and researcher as well as a dogged fact-checker. I love the editing process and its collaboration.
All I want to do is tell stories dear to me—in this day and age truthful stories may be all that save us.
I can be reached by phone at (415) 867–0064 or by email at
jmatt_photo@proton.me, I look forward to hearing from you.