Justin Lundgren, a resident of New Orleans for the past ten years, found inspiration for his photography in his adopted city and its festivities. The images reproduced here are from his art project "Greetings From New Orleans." Just months after the project was initiated, Hurricane Katrina devastated the city. His images of Mardi Gras remain spectacularly celebratory but have an added poignancy as documentation of a bygone era.
"Now that the city has been reshaped by this disaster," Lundgren writes, "I'm left wondering if the quirkiness of its people and the physical charm of the landscape will be irreparably harmed. I look at these images now and feel privileged to have been witness to the pre-Katrina New Orleans. I can only hope that the diaspora will reverse over the next few months to reinvigorate this beloved and beleaguered town."
Lundgren's photos of Mardi Gras have been paired with excerpts from the poet Andrei Codrescu book of essays of his hometown New Orleans, Mon Amour.
"Everything [at Mardi Gras] looks as if it would be or already was painted, photographed, filmed, reproduced. And for all that, it's still real, three-dimensional, and unfailingly bizarre." — Andrei Codrescu
"If people can't come back in their lifetime, they come back when they are dead. And everyone who ever lived here, the costumed Spanish and French dandies, the Victorian ladies of Kate Chopin's age, the whores and ruffians, and the poets, are all still here." — Andrei Codrescu
"African dance and voodoo ritual combine with Catholic pageantry and native exuberance to produce a genuinely New World bacchanalia." — Andrei Codrescu
"All around me, people tried on new masks. The debutantes got crowned somewhere... At fancy balls in gilded salons the courts of the parade monarchs met for bouts of formal drinking." — Andrei Codrescu
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