THE LIVES OF OTHERSTerra Fondriest
Ozark Life

There is a steady cadence to life in the Arkansas Ozarks. The seasons dictate changes in the everyday that become a source of comfort throughout each week and year. Ozark Life weaves together the story of Terra’s family with the lives of people in our community. It’s a long-term documentary project started in 2016 that examines their connection to this land and the roots they have on it, which grow deeper with every generation.

Photo copyright: © Terra Fondriest

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For the past thirteen years, Terra Fondriest has found herself on the journey of navigating motherhood. In 2011, with the birth of her first child, she transitioned from her former adventurous career of traveling the country as a wildland firefighter ‘hotshot’, wrangling horses for an outfitter in Montana’s Bob Marshall, and mapping the trails and features of Buffalo National River for the US Park Service, into a mostly stay-at-home mom at her hilltop house nestled in the woods of the Arkansas Ozarks. It turns out, those prior jobs were no match for the adventure of becoming a mother.
In between changing diapers, growing a garden, wrangling chickens, cutting wood, and exploring the hills and hollers with children in tow, Terra decided to focus more on learning about photography, not only to document her first child and growing family, but also to help understand it. This new creative outlet ignited her passion for visual storytelling which has grown over time into a long-term personal project where she not only documents her family, but the everyday lives of others within her small community as part of a collective patchwork of present day life in the Ozarks.
Back in 2004, Terra received her BS degree in Natural Resources from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and in 2011 a postbaccalaureate degree in GIS mapping from Penn State while working for Buffalo River. Her photography education has evolved from mostly self-taught while being an active participant in the National Geographic Your Shot community, to the Missouri Photo Workshop experience in 2017, a 2018-2019 Women Photograph Mentorship, and continues presently with other mentor and workshop situations and always self-study. She became a member of the highly esteemed Women Photograph in 2018 and as of 2019, began doing freelance work with clients such as The New York Times, The Nature Conservancy, The Washington Post, Vogue, National Audubon Society, The Bitter Southerner, Bloomberg, Insider, Medium and more.

Lodi, Palazzo Modignani – via XX Settembre, 29

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