Concrete River (In - Progress)






Concrete River (2015-Ongoing) is an ongoing project exploring the dynamic relationship between Los Angeles and its most well-known waterway. The Los Angeles River extends over 50 miles, connecting an immense metropolitan area from the San Fernando Valley to Long Beach. Despite its engineering to prevent floods – it was a natural-flowing river before it was paved over after a devastating flood in 1938 – a thriving ecosystem has emerged replete with natural beauty and human activity that is surreal and unexpected.

Over several years, I have photographed and conversed with numerous people who use the river to recreate, retreat and survive. It is both a natural resource and a flashpoint for local interests. Municipalities are interested in development; activists are concerned with access; conservationists want to repair habitat;  the houseless need a place to live. The photographs are intimate portraits of the river and the people who depend on it, as well as documentation of some of the most critical issues facing the region.




Normandie Ave., 2017

Originally published in Garrett Leight- Spectacle Magazine.




L.A. Palms, 2018

Originally published in Garrett Leight - Spectacle Magazine.




Scenes from the South, 2020-2022




Travel Notes, 2014-2020