Tom Moorhouse

Tom Moorhouse — A Working Cowboy of the American West

Tom Moorhouse is not a cowboy preserved in nostalgia, but one shaped by decades of work, responsibility, and lived experience. His life reflects a version of the American West that still exists, though often overlooked—one built on passion, land stewardship, and a deep understanding of cattle and country. These photographs documents Moorhouse as he is, without performance or reenactment, focusing instead on the quiet realities of a working cowboy’s life.

A Life Shaped by Ranching and Responsibility

Tom Moorhouse’s connection to ranching runs deep. His knowledge of cattle, land, and horsemanship comes not from imitation, but from years spent working within the rhythms of ranch life. Days begin early and end late, shaped by weather, animals, and the constant demands of the job. There is little separation between work and identity here—ranching is not something done for effect, but something lived every day.

In a culture often romanticized from the outside, Moorhouse represents the reality behind the image. The work is physical, repetitive, and exacting, requiring patience and long-earned skill. These photographs aim to reflect that truth by focusing on presence rather than action, and on character rather than spectacle.

A Texas Legend Recognized

Tom Moorhouse’s induction into the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame and his Golden Spur Award speaks to the respect he has earned within the ranching community. This recognition is not about mythmaking, but about contribution—acknowledging a lifetime spent working cattle, preserving ranching traditions, and passing along knowledge built through experience.

Rather than elevating him above the work, this honor underscores the importance of people like Moorhouse in sustaining the culture of the American West. His story is inseparable from the land and the labor that define it.

Photographing the Quiet Side of Cowboy Culture

This portrait series was approached with restraint and intention. The goal was not to dramatize cowboy life, but to observe it honestly. Natural light, minimal direction, and an emphasis on stillness allow the details to speak.

By focusing on the spaces between moments, the photographs reveal a side of cowboy culture that often goes unseen. The tools, the wear, and the environment all carry history, and together they form a more complete picture of a life lived through work rather than performance.

Cowboy Photography as Cultural Documentation

Projects like this exist to document a way of life that continues quietly across the American West. Working cowboys like Tom Moorhouse are central to that story, yet they are rarely the focus of contemporary visual records. These photographs are part of a broader effort to create a long-term archive of cowboy culture as it exists today—not as a reenactment, but as lived experience.

Licensing Cowboy Photography for Editorial and Commercial Use

These photographs of Tom Moorhouse are available for editorial and commercial licensing. The work is well suited for magazines, books, brand storytelling, exhibitions, and cultural institutions seeking authentic representations of working cowboy life in the American West. Licensing inquiries are welcomed for projects that value accuracy, context, and visual honesty, with images available as individual selections or as part of a larger cowboy photography archive.

View More Cowboy Photography from the American West

This portrait of Tom Moorhouse is part of an ongoing series documenting working cowboys across the American West.
View the full Cowboy Photography series
Boots O’Neal - Another Texas Legend

Black and white portrait of famous Texas cowboy Tom Moorhouse

Tom Moorhouse - Texas Cowboy

Photograph of Tom Moorhouse at the cemetery on his ranch

Legendary Texas Cowpuncher - Tom Moorhouse

Portrait of legendary Texas cowboy Tom Moorhouse

Portrait of legendary Texas cowboy Tom Moorhouse

Black and white portrait of cowboy Tom Moorhouse on his ranch in Texas

Tom Moorhouse at his ranch in Texas



The Year's Best Photographs

American Photography Competition

The American Photography Competition is one of only a handful of competitions that I believe in out of the countless scams out there promising worldwide “exposure” for photographers. So it’s an honor to say that two of my cowboy photographs have been selected for the AP 40 - Year’s Best Photos! If you’d like to be humbled and inspired then go through the gallery of winning images . So much beautiful work in there.

If you’d like to see more of my authentic cowboy photographs go to this Gallery . And go HERE to purchase photography prints from the cowboy series.

Award winning cowboy photography

Award winning Western Photography

Basketball Photography Exhibition at the Western Spirit Museum

American Backcourts at Scottsdale’s Museum of the West

A Museum Exhibition from the Long-Term Basketball Hoop Photography Project

I was honored to exhibit selections from American Backcourts at Western Spirit: Scottsdale’s Museum of the West in Scottsdale, Arizona.

This exhibition meant a great deal to me, not only because it brought the project into a respected museum setting, but because it placed basketball inside a conversation where many people do not expect to find it: the American West. That tension has always been part of what interests me about this body of work. Over the past fifteen years, I’ve photographed basketball hoops in backyards, alleys, farms, deserts, small towns, and overlooked corners of the country, often in places where the game feels quietly woven into everyday life rather than presented as spectacle.

American Backcourts was on view at Western Spirit from August 26, 2024 through April 13, 2025. The show brought together photographs from across the West that reflect the resourcefulness, beauty, and persistence I’ve found again and again while working on this series. Handmade rims, weathered backboards, empty courts, and improvised places to play all become part of a bigger story about how deeply basketball belongs to American culture.

What I particularly appreciated about this exhibition was the setting. Western Spirit has built its reputation around art, history, and ideas connected to the West, so it was meaningful to see these photographs presented there. The show offered a chance to frame basketball not only as sport, but as part of the visual language of the region.

This exhibition is one chapter in the larger American Backcourts project, an ongoing body of work documenting basketball hoop photographs from across the United States.

To see more from the project, visit the main American Backcourts gallery.
For collectors, available works can be viewed on the basketball photography prints page.

American Backcourts basketball hoop photography exhibition installed at Western Spirit: Scottsdale’s Museum of the West

American Backcourts on display at Western Spirit: Scottsdale’s Museum of the West in Scottsdale, Arizona.

Exterior of Western Spirit: Scottsdale’s Museum of the West with “#1 Western Museum in the USA” sign

Western Spirit: Scottsdale’s Museum of the West in Scottsdale, Arizona, where the American Backcourts exhibition was presented.

California Dreaming: A Road Trip Down the Iconic Highway 395

A Journey Through California's Highway 395: Road Trip Photography That Inspires Wanderlust

The 395 doesn’t try to impress you, not at first. It just unfolds, mile by mile, like an old story you’ve heard before but can’t stop listening to. It’s the kind of road that sneaks up on you—not with grand gestures but with a steady, insistent rhythm of landscapes that feel too big, too wild, to be corralled by a single state line. California’s Highway 395 is less a road and more a meditation, a reminder of how much world is left to see if you’re willing to slow down.

I set out with a camera and no real plan beyond the next mile marker. Somewhere between the austere shimmer of Mono Lake and the weathered small towns, the trip stopped being a trip and started being something else. The desert has a way of doing that to you—pulling you into its silence until all the distractions fall away, leaving just the crunch of gravel underfoot and the distant call of a raven.

In the Eastern Sierra, the sunrises can almost be too much to handle. The sky lights up like it had been holding its breath all night, spilling gold and rose over the boulders in a way that made you feel like an intruder. I stood there with my camera, trying to keep up, knowing full well that no photograph could ever do it justice. That didn’t stop me from trying.

Further north, Lone Pine and Bishop felt like towns out of time, stubbornly clinging to their place in the world while the highway carried travelers past them. In Bishop, I stopped for food stayed for the kind of quiet you only find in places where the mountains feel close enough to lean against. The Owens River wound its way through the valley like it knew all the secrets, but wasn’t about to share them.

The real marvel of the 395, though, is how it doesn’t let you settle into one story. One moment, you’re in the shadow of Mt. Whitney, the tallest peak in the Lower 48, and the next, you’re staring at a twisted bristlecone pine that’s been alive longer than you can comprehend. The road runs through alpine meadows, desert basins, and forgotten hot springs, each place asking for something different from you.

For me, it was the photographs that tied it all together. A way to hold onto something that refuses to be pinned down. The light shifted constantly, painting scenes that demanded to be captured and then changed the second you pressed the shutter. It’s the kind of road where you’re never done, where you leave knowing there are still images waiting for you just around the next curve.

Highway 395 isn’t just a route—it’s a reminder that the best stories aren’t always told in words. Sometimes they’re told in the play of shadows on a canyon wall, the glint of water under an endless sky, or the long, empty stretch of road ahead.

I came back with photographs, but what I really brought home was the feeling of the place—the way it gets into your bones and stays there. If you’re looking for more than a picture, if you’re chasing the kind of beauty that doesn’t try too hard, Highway 395 has it in spades.

A Larger Body of Work Beyond Highway 395

The photographs from California’s 395 aren’t isolated moments. They’re part of a much larger body of work built over years of driving across the American West, often with no fixed destination.

What drew me back to this stretch of road again and again is the same thing that defines the broader project—places that exist just outside of attention. Motels that have seen better decades. Gas stations still holding on. Empty intersections where nothing happens, but somehow everything is there.

Highway 395 is one of the most visually striking corridors in the country, but it’s also a gateway into something quieter. The photographs here sit alongside thousands of others made across Nevada, Utah, Texas, and beyond—images that eventually became Roadside Meditations, a book focused on the overlooked spaces that define the American landscape.

If you’ve spent time on 395, you already understand the pace. Long stretches of road, light shifting across the Eastern Sierra, and the feeling that you’re moving through something older than the highway itself. That same rhythm carries through the rest of the work.

Explore the Roadside Meditations fine art photography book

Continue reading: Nevada roadside photography

Explore more from the Roadside Meditations series

If you’re looking for photography like this for editorial or commercial use, contact me directly - rob@robhammerphotography.com

California 395 Photography Print

Black and white photography of California Highway 395

Photograph of the vintage signage along 395 in Independence, California

Vintage signs along the 395 in Independence, California

Photograph of the Still Life Cafe in Independence, CA

Still Life Cafe - Independence, CA

Photography of Lloyd's in Lone Pine, California with the Sierra Nevada Mountains in the background

Lloyd's - Lone Pine, CA

Photograph of a hotel in Lone Pine, Ca

Hotel - Lone Pine, Ca

California 395 Road Trip Photography

Photograph of the El Rancho Motel in Bishop, California

El Rancho Motel - Bishop, California

Sierra Nevada Mountains Road Trip Photo

Driving through the Sierra Nevada Mountains near Mammoth, CA

Fine art photography of Highway 395 in Mono Lake, CA

Driving past Mono Lake - California

Photograph of the moon rising at dusk over Mono Lake in California

Fine art photograph of Mono Lake, CA

Fine art road trip photography

Driving on Highway 395 past Mono Lake towards Bridgeport, CA

Photograph of the bar at the Bridgeport Inn - California

Bar at the Bridgeport Inn

Photograph inside the Bridgeport Inn Hotel - California

Entrance to the Cowboy Rooms at the Bridgeport Inn - California

Neon sign of a motel in Bridgeport, California

Hotel - Bridgeport, CA

Photograph of Topaz Lake on the California/Nevada border

Sunrise over Topaz Lake in California

Old dive bar signs on highway 395 in California

Vintage dive bar signage

A rainbow over hills of sagebrush in the Eastern Sierra as seen from inside a truck during a Highway 395 Roadtrip

Highway 395 Roadtrip photo

A Traditional American Barbershop - A Neighborhood Fixture

An Old School Neighborhood Barbershop

I first photographed this barbershop in San Diego in 2011, early on in what would eventually become the Barbershops of America project. At the time, I didn’t fully realize how important these photographs would become. I was simply drawn to places like this — shops that felt unchanged, where time moved a little slower and the barber knew everyone who walked through the door.

This shop, run by Johnny Lovato, was one of those places.

A Shop That Felt Lived In

Walking into Johnny’s barbershop felt like stepping into another era. The space wasn’t curated or styled — it was simply lived in. The chairs, the mirrors, the worn floor, the little personal details scattered throughout the shop all told a story without trying to.

These weren’t decorations meant to evoke nostalgia. They were just the things that had accumulated over time. That honesty is what made the shop special and what kept the doors open to the same neighborhood of friendly customers for decades.

The Barber and the Community

Johnny was always kind and welcoming, the type of barber who made time for conversation as easily as he made time for a haircut. His shop wasn’t just a place people came to get cleaned up — it was a place where stories were shared and relationships were maintained.

One of the small details I always remember is how happy Johnny was feeding his bird Cheetos. It’s a simple moment, but it perfectly captures the personality of the space and the rhythm of the shop. Those are the moments I’m always looking for when I photograph places like this.

Returning Years Later

I returned to photograph the shop again in 2019. By then, Johnny’s son had taken over the business. Much of the spirit of the shop remained, but time had clearly moved forward — as it always does.

Not long after, the barbershop closed, and the space was eventually transformed into something new, and in my opinion, soulless. That’s the reality for many traditional barbershops across the country. Rising rents, retirement, and redevelopment quietly erase places that once anchored their neighborhoods. Luckily another barber took over the space, so it remains a barbershop, just without the decades of character and memories that once filled it.

Why These Photographs Matter

Barbershops like this rarely close with ceremony. They disappear quietly, often without anyone realizing that a piece of local culture has gone with them.

This series exists so that those places aren’t completely lost. These photographs are not about nostalgia for nostalgia’s sake — they’re about acknowledging the importance of everyday spaces that shaped communities for generations.

Part of a Larger Archive

Johnny Lovato’s barbershop in San Diego is just one small part of a much larger body of work documenting traditional barbershops across the United States. Together, these images form an archive of a disappearing American tradition — one shop, one barber, one story at a time.

More Barbershops of America

View The Book

View The Gallery

Old-school American barbershop interior, Point Loma San Diego documentary photograph

Interior of a traditional barbershop in Point Loma, San Diego, where time-worn chairs and details reflect decades of community history.

Johnny Lovato feeding his pet bird inside his barbershop in San Diego, California

Johnny Lovato, the barber, shares a moment feeding the shop’s pet bird — a small gesture emblematic of daily life in the space.

An old school barber smiles while watching his pet bird

Johnny Lovato smiles after feeding his pet bird at his barbershop in San Diego

Portrait of a barber standing behind his chair in a traditional San Diego barbershop

Portrait of a barber standing behind his chair — a quiet testament to the people who made these shops more than just businesses.

Rotary telephone inside a traditional barbershop, documentary detail photo

An old rotary telephone inside the shop — one of the many small artifacts that speak to the barbershop’s lived-in past

Barber sitting in his chair at a traditional barbershop in San Diego, California

A barber sits in his chair during a quiet moment — a human pause captured in the rhythm of the shop.

Customer getting a haircut in a traditional barbershop in San Diego, California documentary image

A customer receives a haircut — a simple everyday moment that also anchors the narrative of barbershop culture.

University Club - San Diego

University Club - San Diego, California

Recently had a great opportunity to present some of my cowboy photography to members at The University Club in San Diego, California. Sitting on the 34th floor of the Symphony Towers, the club has the best view in all of America’s Finest City! It was a pleasure just being up there, but even more so presenting work along a couple other photographs that I’m lucky to call friends - Nick Nacca and Gary Allard as well as APA San Diego. It was a great night all the way around. The three of us had fun presenting our work and everyone in attendance was very engaged during and after. I’m grateful for the opportunity to share!!

Go here to shop my fine art cowboy photography prints

Fine art photography at the University Club in San Diego

Photography presentation at The University Club in San Diego, California

Photograph of fine art photographers presenting work at The University Club in San Diego, California

Color photographs taken by Tim Hardy

Black and white photo taken by Rich Soublet

Paris Street Photography

Paris Street Photographs — An Intimate Visual Journey

Paris in Candid Street Photographs

Paris moves quickly, but its most revealing moments happen quietly.

Away from the monuments and postcards, the city reveals itself in passing glances, small gestures, and the subtle choreography of people moving through shared space. These Paris street photographs were made while walking without an agenda — observing light, waiting for alignment, and responding instinctively when form, expression, and atmosphere briefly came together.

Rather than chasing iconic scenes, this body of work focuses on the in-between moments that define everyday Paris: café conversations, solitary figures crossing wide intersections, brief pauses along the Seine, and the unspoken language of posture and movement.

These photographs are not souvenirs. They are visual records of time and place, created to live on the wall as fine art prints.

What You’ll See in This Paris Street Photography Series

This ongoing collection reflects a broad, honest view of the city as it is lived:

  • Quiet exchanges at cafés and sidewalk tables

  • Figures moving alone through architectural space

  • Subtle interactions between strangers

  • Parisian streets shaped as much by people as by buildings

  • Moments of stillness within constant motion

Each image exists as both a documentary moment and a compositional study — balancing structure with spontaneity.

The Process Behind the Photographs

These images were made through patience rather than pursuit.

Street photography, at its core, is about observation — learning how light moves through a space, understanding how people occupy it, and waiting for those elements to align naturally. Many of these photographs came from standing in one place, or simply letting scenes unfold rather than forcing them.

The goal is not spectacle, but authenticity. Nothing staged. Nothing repeated. Each frame represents a singular moment that will never occur again in quite the same way.

Fine Art Prints of Paris Street Photography

All photographs in this series are available as museum-quality fine art prints, produced with longevity and tonal depth in mind.

  • Printed on archival, gallery-grade paper

  • Professional pigment inks for rich blacks and subtle midtones

  • Available in multiple sizes, including large-scale statement prints

  • Select images available as signed, limited editions

These prints are designed for collectors, interior spaces, and anyone who values photography as a lasting object rather than a disposable image.

Custom sizing, framing guidance, and edition details are available upon request.

Collecting Paris, One Moment at a Time

Street photography preserves what would otherwise disappear — a look exchanged, a pause mid-step, a moment of reflection before the city moves on.

If you’re drawn to Paris not as a destination, but as a living, breathing place shaped by human presence, these photographs offer a quieter way to bring the city into your space.

Explore the images below to view available fine art prints, or contact me directly to discuss editions, sizing, and framing options.

Black and white photograph of a fashionable woman walking alone through a Paris intersection

A solitary figure moves through Paris, framed by architecture and empty space.

Black and white photograph of a bridge over the Seine beneath dramatic clouds

A quiet moment along the Seine as dark clouds gather over Paris.

Woman in a green coat holding a mustard yellow hat on a Paris sidewalk

A fleeting Paris moment—color, posture, and gesture captured without interruption.

Candid street portrait of people talking along the Seine in Paris

An unguarded exchange along the Seine, framed by the city’s familiar architecture.

Black and white photograph of a tender moment between two people on a Paris street

Photograph of a couple embracing on the street in Paris, France

Black and white photograph of café workers standing on a Paris street

Café workers pause between moments, grounded in posture and presence.

Paris rooftops leading toward Saint-Étienne-du-Mont under a cloudy sky

Paris rooftops unfold toward Saint-Étienne-du-Mont, capturing the layered geometry and muted tones of the city.

Two women seated at a café table in Paris, engaged in quiet conversation

Photograph of two women drinking at a cafe in Paris, France

People in fashionable clothing walking near Hôtel du Louvre on a Paris street

Pedestrians move through central Paris, where historic architecture meets modern pace and fashion

Woman in a polka dot dress partially obscured by pink flowers in Paris

Color and form intersect as a passerby blends into the visual rhythm of the street.

Black and white photograph of a woman walking past historic Paris architecture

Photograph of a well dressed woman walking in Paris, France

Black and white photograph of Sacré-Cœur Basilica in Paris under dramatic clouds

The Basilica of Sacré Coeur de Montmartre

Woman carrying a large hat box crosses a Paris street in front of a neighborhood café, capturing a candid moment of everyday Paris life.

A woman carrying an oversized hat box moves through a café-lined crosswalk in Paris, a small, surreal detail that turns an ordinary street moment into something quietly cinematic.

Woman standing inside a Paris metro car near the Notre-Dame station

A fleeting pause inside the Paris metro, where movement and stillness briefly align.

Red bicycle locked to a street sign against textured Parisian walls in France

A red bicycle rests against a worn Paris wall, a quiet study of color, texture, and everyday city life.

Close-up of a folded umbrella and clothing details on a Paris street

A study of pattern and texture—small details that define everyday Paris.

Group of people sharing wine and cheese at an outdoor table in Paris

An afternoon unfolds around wine and cheese, capturing the social rhythm of everyday Paris.

Visitor viewing a painting inside a Paris museum, seen from behind

A quiet exchange between viewer and artwork inside a Paris museum (La Louvre)

Black and white photograph of classic Paris buildings along the Seine River

Shadow the Notre Dame Cathedral on buildings along the Siene River in Paris, France

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone - Olympics

Gold Medal - World Record - Hurdles

American Hurdler Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone has been putting on quite a show at the 2024 Olympics in Paris. If you saw her performance last night in the 400m race, then you know why people are calling her the GOAT! There wasn’t another runner even close to her at the finish line when she took home another Gold Medal and set a new world record! Making America proud!!

I shot these photographs of Sydney a few years back while she was training on the track in Los Angeles and they are available for commercial licensing, editorial licensing, and wall as fine art prints / wall art. Contact me directly to inquire rob@robhammerphotography.com

Portrait of Sydney McLaughlin Levrone

Photograph of Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone training

Sydney McLaughlin Levrone smiling

Portrait of Olympic Champion Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone training on a track

Why Choosing the Right Western Photography Gallery Makes All the Difference

What a True Western Photography Gallery Offers You

How to Recognize Authentic Cowboy Prints & Find the Gallery That Delivers

When someone searches for a Western Photography Gallery, they aren’t just shopping for images. They’re shopping for moments—stories framed in dust, sky, horses, and grit. If you’re on that path, you want work that goes beyond decor. You want pieces that truly bring you into the West.

Here’s what separates an ordinary gallery from one that shows Western photography worth owning—and why browsing the right gallery’s prints matters.

What Realness Looks Like

The most memorable Western photography galleries don’t rely on props or polished scenes. They show real cowboys, working through weather, dawn light, and hard ground. The best prints are made on working ranches (not back lots), shot in conditions most photographers don’t love: dust, heat, early light, or cold wind. That “grit,” the unscripted moments, give each photo life.

Details Matter, & They Tell Stories

  • Print Quality & Materials: Look for archival paper, fine art printing processes, signed and numbered editions. You don’t want distortion, bad color, or flimsy framing when it’s hanging in your living room.

  • Story & Location: Where was this shot? What season? Who is in the frame? Knowing it was taken at a historic ranch in Texas, or under heavy skies in Nevada, adds meaning.

  • Range of Styles: Cowboys roping, branding, open range, strong cloudscapes, old barns, quiet moments, motion blur—variety signals someone curating with intention.

Why My Gallery Is Different

Here’s how my gallery aims to hit what you’re looking for when you type in Western Photography Gallery:

  • Prints of real cowboys doing real work—no models, no stage setups.

  • Both black & white and color pieces that capture light, weather, and texture.

  • Locations from working ranches across the American West—Texas, Montana, Nevada.

  • Thoughtfully produced limited editions, signed, numbered, ready to hang or frame.

  • Enough selection to find something that speaks to you—whether you like dynamic action, sweeping landscapes, or intimate portraits.

How to Use This Gallery Right Now

If you want to see Western photography prints that match what you’re searching for:

  • Visit my gallery page - Out of a few favorites? Compare sizes and print make—think about where you’ll hang it.

  • Need framing suggestions? Reach out. I’m happy to help visualize a piece in your space.

  • Not ready yet? Bookmark the gallery or join the email list—new work drops regularly, and limited editions sell.

Gallery of western cowboy photography prints

Western cowboy photography prints

Black and white photography print of a cowboy on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Cowboy Photography Gallery

Fine art black and white photography print of the Grand Teton Mountains

Western landscape photography print

Limited edition cowboy cattle branding photography print

Cattle branding photography print

Authentic black and white cowboy photography print

Black and white cowboy print

Black and white photograph of cowboys trailing cattle on a ranch in Montana

Photograph of a Montana cattle drive

Authentic photography prints of American Cowboys

Western Photography Gallery

Cape Cod Photography

Cape Cod Photography: Quiet Coastal Landscapes & New England Summer Light

I’ve been coming to Cape Cod every summer for as long as I can remember.

Long before I ever picked up a camera, the place was already familiar—low light over the water at the end of the day, the smell of salt and marsh, the feeling of driving out toward the edge of the land where everything starts to thin out. Over time, those memories became something I wanted to hold onto more deliberately.

These photographs come from years of returning, not as a visitor passing through, but as someone who knows what the Cape feels like when you slow down enough to pay attention.

Photographing What Doesn’t Announce Itself

Cape Cod is often photographed in a very specific way—bright summer days, full beaches, the kind of scenes that make it feel like a destination.

That’s never been what stayed with me.

What I remember are the quieter edges. Early mornings before anything opens. Overcast afternoons where the light flattens everything into soft tones. Wind moving through the dune grass with no one else around. The subtle shifts in color that happen along the shoreline when the weather turns.

Those are the moments I’m drawn to now.

A Familiar Place, Seen Differently Over Time

Coming back to the same place year after year changes how you see it.

At first, it’s just memory—places you recognize, roads you’ve driven, beaches you return to out of habit. But over time, those familiar scenes start to open up in a different way. You notice the details you overlooked before. You start to understand how the light behaves. You begin to anticipate the conditions rather than react to them.

This work is shaped by that kind of repetition.

Not chasing new locations, but paying closer attention to a place that’s been part of my life for decades.

Cape Cod Photography Prints

Photographs from this series are available as museum-quality fine art prints, produced on archival paper for collectors, coastal homes, and interior spaces that call for something quieter.

Contact me directly for print sizes, pricing, and licensing info - rob@robhammerphotography.com

Part of a Larger Body of American Work

This series connects to a broader project photographing landscapes across the United States—places that sit outside of the obvious, where the details are easy to miss unless you’re looking for them.

Cape Cod fits into that naturally.

It’s a well-known place, but the version of it I’m interested in feels closer to the same quiet spaces I’ve photographed in small towns, desert edges, and roadside stops across the country.

You can view related work here:

Sandy path through grass dunes leading to First Encounter Beach on Cape Cod in black and white

A narrow path through the dunes leads toward First Encounter Beach, one of the Cape’s most historic shorelines

Black and white photo of Cape Cod sandbars and tidal flats with rippled textures and distant coastline

Tidal flats stretch across Cape Cod at low tide, revealing patterns in the sand that shift with the ocean

Black and white landscape of Cape Cod dunes and shoreline with distant figures along the water

First Encounter Beach - A quiet stretch of Cape Cod shoreline framed by dunes, where the landscape feels open and unhurried

Colorful beach umbrellas on Cape Cod with people relaxing near the shoreline on a bright summer day

Mayflower Beach - Color and pattern come together along the Cape Cod shoreline, where umbrellas and ocean light define the scene

People gathered at Sesuit Harbor Cafe raw bar on Cape Cod with seafood plates and outdoor seating

A summer afternoon at Sesuit Harbor Cafe, where seafood, crowds, and harbor views define the Cape Cod experience

People gathered on a whale watching boat off Cape Cod during golden hour light

Aboard a whale watching boat off Cape Cod, passengers move through warm evening light as the ocean stretches out around them

Foggy scene at Wellfleet Harbor on Cape Cod with a sailboat anchored in calm water

Fog settles over Wellfleet Harbor, softening the shoreline and reducing the scene to quiet shapes and still water

Black and white photo of a Cape Cod seafood shack with raw bar sign and weathered wood exterior

A classic Cape Cod seafood shack with a raw bar sign, capturing the character of coastal dining culture

Picnic tables overlooking Provincetown harbor with boats in the distance and soft coastal light

Picnic tables sit above Provincetown harbor, offering a quiet view of boats and shifting Cape Cod light

Crowd gathered along a Cape Cod road watching a 4th of July parade with American flags and summer atmosphere

Orleans, MA - A summer parade moves through a Cape Cod town, with flags, families, and a sense of local tradition

Evening scene at Mac’s on the Pier in Wellfleet with people lined up for seafood under soft light

Evening at Mac’s on the Pier in Wellfleet, where the line for seafood becomes part of the Cape Cod ritual

Crowded Cape Cod beach with umbrellas, chairs, and families relaxing on the sand during summer

Dennis, MA - A busy summer afternoon on a Cape Cod beach, with umbrellas and families spread across the sand under shifting coastal clouds

Black and white photo of Mayflower Beach on Cape Cod with people walking across shallow water at low tide

Low tide at Mayflower Beach reveals wide open sand flats, where people move slowly across the water under dramatic skies

Black and white close-up of a child with braided hair at the beach on Cape Cod

A quiet portrait at the beach, capturing a small moment within the larger rhythm of a Cape Cod summer

Black and white photo of a lone person sitting in a beach chair facing the ocean on Cape Cod

A solitary figure sits facing the Atlantic, capturing a quieter side of Cape Cod beyond the crowds

Teal Blake - Portrait of a Western Artist

Teal Blake — Contemporary Western Painter

Teal Blake is a contemporary Western painter whose work is grounded in firsthand experience with ranch life in Texas. His paintings — often depicting working cowboys, horses, and cattle — carry a quiet realism that feels observed rather than imagined.

I spent time with Blake outside Fort Worth, Texas, moving between ranch and studio, chatting about how real life influences his work.

The West, for Blake, isn’t a costume. It’s a lived place.

Painting What You Know

Blake’s subjects aren’t distant symbols of the American West. They are ranches he worked, horses he’s rode, cattle he’s gathered, and fences he’s leaned against. The gestures in his paintings — the shift of weight in a saddle, the posture of a cowboy getting bucked — can’t happed without being there.

There’s restraint in his approach. Light is handled carefully. Dust and movement are suggested rather than dramatized. That restraint mirrors the culture he paints. Working cowboys rarely posture. They work. Blake paints with that same economy.

Inside The Studio

Blake’s studio feels like an extension of his personality and his happy place. Art books by the greats like Charlie Russel line the shelves. Ropes and tack hang alongside finished works and studies. Skulls, saddles, and artifacts sit comfortably beside watercolor palettes and brushes worn down from years of use.

Sketches scatter across the floor. Pigment pools in the corners of a palette. A finished painting rests on an easel, framed but still close to the working space. The room is warm and inviting — an easy place for an artist to spend his life.

Photographing a Western Artist At Work

I’ve talk about this before, but I believe it’s vital for an artist or photographer to concentrate on subjects they organically connect with. For years now I’ve been photographing working cowboys all across the West, and was a fan of Teal’s work long before we collaborated on this shoot. To document a culture means more than just the action on a ranch, and Western Artists like Blake are a vital piece of the culture. So it was fun connecting with him at his studio. He’s a real easy going guy. In fact, if you didn’t know he was an incredibly talented artist, you’d think he was a normal guy. Turns out Teal loves food and fly fishing, so we had lots to talk about.

After the shoot I was headed south and wanted to fly fish the Brazos River, but forgot my fly box, and all the fly shops were closed, so Teal generously lent me his. That’s Texas Hospitality at it’s finest.

Contemporary Western Art and the American West

In a time when Western imagery is often stylized for entertainment, artists like Teal Blake continue a quieter tradition — one rooted in observation and craft.

His work contributes to the evolving story of contemporary Western art. Not nostalgic fantasy, but present-day ranch life rendered with clarity and restraint.

Spending time in his world reinforces something I’ve learned repeatedly while photographing cowboys: the American West is not disappearing. It is working. It is adapting. And it is still needs to be documented — in paint and in photographs.

Explore More Western Art & Photography

If you’re interested in contemporary Western painters, you may also want to view my studio portraits of William Matthews — another artist deeply connected to working cowboy culture.

You can also explore my long-term photographic project documenting working cowboys across the American West.

Close black and white portrait of Teal Blake wearing a cowboy hat outdoors

A close black-and-white portrait of Teal Blake, the brim of his hat casting a quiet shadow. The simplicity echoes the understated strength of his Western paintings.

Wide interior view of Teal Blake’s Western art studio filled with paintings, skulls, ropes, and books

A wide view of Teal Blake’s studio captures the full atmosphere of his creative space — Western artifacts, cattle skulls, ropes, books, and paintings surrounding him as he works. The studio itself feels like an extension of the ranch life that informs his art.

Black and white portrait of Western artist Teal Blake standing in a Texas field wearing a cowboy hat

A black-and-white portrait of Western artist Teal Blake standing alone in an open Texas field. The quiet landscape mirrors the restraint and atmosphere found in his contemporary Western paintings.

Overhead view of watercolor palette, brushes, and sketches inside Western artist Teal Blake’s studio

A well-used watercolor palette sits among sketches and studies inside Teal Blake’s studio. The layered pigments and quiet experimentation reveal the discipline behind his contemporary Western paintings.

Teal Blake standing among horses on a Texas ranch wearing a cowboy hat

Teal Blake among horses on his Texas ranch. Direct experience with ranch life continues to inform the realism and sensitivity of his Western artwork.

Profile of Western artist Teal Blake behind a wooden ranch fence with longhorn skull in foreground

Seen through a weathered ranch fence, Teal Blake pauses beside a longhorn skull — symbols deeply rooted in the visual language of the American West.

Teal Blake seated on studio floor surrounded by watercolor sketches and Western art materials

Inside his studio, Teal Blake works through sketches and watercolor studies. The space — layered with books, tack, and ranch artifacts — reflects decades immersed in Western culture.

Framed Western cowboy painting by Teal Blake displayed on studio easel

A finished cowboy painting rests on the easel in Blake’s studio — a glimpse into his interpretation of movement, dust, and the rhythm of working cattle.

Black and white photograph of Teal Blake reflecting in his art studio surrounded by Western artifacts

In a quiet moment inside his studio, Teal Blake reflects between works. The walls — lined with skulls, reference materials, and paintings — reveal a life shaped by the American West.

Western artist Teal Blake standing with longhorn cattle in wooded Texas pasture

Teal Blake stands among longhorn cattle in a wooded pasture, a scene that reflects the everyday realities behind much of his contemporary Western art.

Western artist Teal Blake kneeling with his dog inside his Texas art studio

Teal Blake pauses with his dog inside the studio lined with books, tack, and finished paintings. His environment reflects a life closely tied to ranch culture and the realities of the American West.

Jackson, Mississippi Photography Prints

Bring Home the Charm of Jackson, Mississippi: Wall Art Prints of Historic Landmarks

Jackson, Mississippi, known as the "City with Soul," boasts a rich tapestry of history, culture, and striking landmarks. For photography collectors, the city offers a treasure trove of opportunities to acquire fine art photographs that capture its essence. Whether you're drawn to historical architecture, vibrant street scenes, or serene natural landscapes, Jackson's landmarks provide a stunning canvas for artistic expression.

Why Collect Fine Art Photography of Jackson, Mississippi?

Fine art photography transcends mere documentation—it captures the emotion, texture, and unique character of a place. Jackson’s landmarks, from historic sites to modern attractions, tell stories that resonate with both locals and visitors. Collecting photographs of these iconic scenes allows you to preserve and celebrate the city’s spirit while enhancing your space with meaningful art.

Jackson’s Most Historic Buildings

1. Mississippi State Capitol
A masterpiece of Beaux-Arts architecture, the Mississippi State Capitol has stood proudly since 1903. With its grand dome, intricate columns, and marble interiors, this building serves as the seat of government and a symbol of Jackson’s political heritage. Its grounds feature notable monuments, including the towering Women of the Confederacy statue.

2. Old Capitol Museum
The Old Capitol, constructed in 1839, is one of the most significant landmarks in Mississippi's history. This Greek Revival-style building served as the state’s capitol until 1903 and was the site of major historical events, such as Mississippi’s secession from the Union in 1861. Now a museum, it offers a glimpse into the state’s political past and architectural grandeur.

3. Standard Life Building

The Standard Life Building in Jackson, Mississippi, is a striking example of Art Deco architecture that has stood as a symbol of the city’s history and resilience since its completion in 1929. Once the tallest building in Mississippi, this iconic structure was designed with intricate details, including geometric patterns, elegant terracotta ornamentation, and distinctive setbacks that embody the architectural trends of the era.

4. Cathedral of St. Peter The Apostle
The Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle in Jackson, Mississippi, is a breathtaking testament to the city's deep religious and architectural heritage. Established in 1847, the cathedral's stunning Gothic Revival style stands tall as a beacon of faith and history. Its pointed arches, intricate stained glass windows, and towering spires evoke a sense of grandeur and spiritual serenity. The cathedral’s presence on the Jackson skyline is both a visual and emotional anchor for the community.

5.LaMar Life Building
The Lamar Life Building is a historic building in Jackson, Mississippi, USA. It was designed in the Gothic Revival architectural style, and it was completed in 1924. It is the twelfth tallest building in Jackson, and was considered Jackson's first skyscraper.

6. Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Cathedral

Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Cathedral is one of Jackson’s most cherished landmarks, a stunning example of English Gothic architecture that blends historical significance with striking beauty. Built in 1903, the cathedral’s soaring spires, intricate stonework, and lush stained glass windows create a visual narrative of both strength and grace. Its hallowed halls have witnessed generations of worshippers, making it a significant symbol of Jackson’s spiritual and cultural life.

Tips for Collectors:

Choosing the Perfect Piece

  • Focus on Quality: Look for prints that showcase exceptional composition, lighting, and attention to detail. High-quality materials such as archival paper or metal prints ensure longevity.

  • Consider the Artist’s Perspective: A fine art photograph should reflect the unique vision of the artist. Consider their ability to tell a story or evoke emotion through their work.

  • Think About Your Space: Consider where the artwork will be displayed. A vibrant cityscape might suit a modern living room, while a tranquil nature scene could enhance a cozy study.All photographs are available as prints for your home of office - rob@robhammerphotography.com

    The Enduring Appeal of Jackson’s Fine Art Photography

    Jackson’s landmarks offer an endless source of inspiration for photographers and collectors alike. Each image tells a story of the city’s past, present, and future, making it a meaningful addition to any art collection. By investing in fine art photography, you’re not only celebrating Jackson’s beauty but also supporting the artists who bring its soul to life. Explore, collect, and let the vibrant spirit of Jackson, Mississippi, enrich your walls and your heart.

    Click here to shop Jackson, Mississippi Wall Art

Photography print of the State Capitol Building in Jackson, Mississippi

Mississippi Capital Building Wall Art

Black and white print of the Standard Life Building in Jackson, Mississippi

Historic black and white photograph of downtown Jackson, Mississippi

The Old Capitol Museum

Black and white print of the LaMar Life Building in Jackson, Mississippi

Photograph of a church in downtown Jackson, MS

Cathedral of St. Peter The Apostle

Fine art print of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Cathedral

Texas Plains Photography: Llano Estacado

Llano Estacado Photographs

The Llano Estacado is easy to misunderstand. It’s often described as flat, empty, or featureless, but spending time there reveals something very different. This high plains region of West Texas is defined less by landmarks and more by distance — by how far the horizon stretches, how light moves across open ground, and how small human presence feels once you slow down enough to notice it.

These photographs were made while traveling through small towns, farmland, and back roads that sit quietly within that vastness. They are not meant to explain the Llano Estacado so much as sit with it.

A Landscape Defined by Absence

There are few visual interruptions on the Llano Estacado. Roads run straight for miles. Fields repeat themselves. Buildings appear only occasionally, and when they do, they often feel temporary — as if they were placed there out of necessity rather than permanence.

That absence becomes the subject. Empty intersections, wind-worked soil, distant structures, and isolated signage take on weight simply because there is so little competing for attention. The photographs rely on restraint: space, quiet geometry, and light doing most of the work.

Small Towns, Everyday Objects

Scattered across the plains are towns built around utility rather than spectacle. Hardware stores, abandoned buildings, hand-painted signs, school stadiums, and roadside memorials all reflect daily life shaped by isolation and self-reliance.

Rather than searching for dramatic moments, this work focuses on ordinary details — objects left where they were last used, buildings holding onto their purpose a little longer than expected. These elements reveal how people adapt to scale, weather, and distance without needing to announce it.

Wind, Agriculture, and Modern Presence

The Llano Estacado is both deeply agricultural and increasingly shaped by modern infrastructure. Wind turbines rise above fields that have been worked for generations. Long rows of crops trace patterns across land that feels otherwise unbroken.

This overlap between old and new is quiet but persistent. The turbines don’t overwhelm the landscape; instead, they become another line on the horizon — another marker of how the region continues to evolve while remaining visually spare.

Photographing the In-Between

These images are less about destinations and more about what exists between them. They were made by pulling over often, driving slowly, and paying attention to what most people pass without stopping.

The goal is not nostalgia, but observation. Not commentary, but presence. The Llano Estacado rewards patience, and these photographs reflect that pace — measured, minimal, and unforced.

Interested in These Photographs?

A selection of photographs from this series is available as fine art prints, and the full body of work is available for editorial and commercial licensing.

If you’d like more information, feel free to get in touch.

View more photography from the American West

Part of a Larger Project

Although the Llano Estacado is an entity in and of itself, it’s also an iconic piece of America, which fits perfectly in my long term project photographing the often overlooked parts of this country.

View more American photography

“It’s a long way, round the Llano Estacado” - Colter Wall

Water for sale sign along a rural road on the Llano Estacado in Texas

A hand-painted water-for-sale sign along a remote Texas highway, underscoring the scarcity and scale of life on the Llano Estacado.

Empty intersection with abandoned buildings on the Llano Estacado

A rural intersection on the Llano Estacado, where roads stretch outward and towns feel held together by distance.

Minimal black and white landscape with distant wind turbines on the Llano Estacado

A spare horizon broken only by distant farm buildings and turbines, emphasizing scale and emptiness on the Llano Estacado.

Interior of a small rural hardware store on the Llano Estacado in Texas

Inside a small-town hardware store on the Llano Estacado, where tools, shelves, and light speak to decades of daily use.

Dust blowing across a plowed field on the Llano Estacado in West Texas

Dust moves across freshly worked earth, softening the horizon on the wide, exposed plains of the Llano Estacado.

Roadside crosses and memorials in rural West Texas on the Llano Estacado

Roadside crosses stand against the open plains, marking memory, faith, and loss across the Llano Estacado.

Handwritten letters and envelopes collected in a rural Texas home on the Llano Estacado

Handwritten letters from an abandoned Texas home, marked by distance, memory, and everyday life on the Llano Estacado.

Black and white photograph of farmland reflected in a car mirror on the Llano Estacado

Farmland stretches ahead and behind, reflected in a car mirror while crossing the open roads of the Llano Estacado.

A downtown high rise tower in a small town on the Llano Estacado

A lone midcentury tower rises above a quiet town, emphasizing the scale and openness of the Llano Estacado.

Wind turbines towering over abandoned rural buildings on the Llano Estacado in Texas

Wind turbines rise over aging structures, where modern infrastructure meets long-standing rural life on the Llano Estacado.

Vintage wall sign reading Your Credit Is Good in a small town on the Llano Estacado

A fading brick wall sign promises trust and familiarity, echoing the economic rhythms of Llano Estacado towns.

Photograph of a dirt road going through the Llano Estacado in Texas

Photograph of a long dirt road on the Llano Estacado in Texas

Brick house in rural Texas with an owner financing sign on the Llano Estacado

A modest brick house on the Llano Estacado, where handwritten signs and quiet streets reflect a self-reliant rural economy.

Minimal black and white photograph of a wind farm along the Llano Estacado horizon

A nearly empty frame holds a thin horizon and distant turbines, emphasizing restraint and scale on the Llano Estacado.

High school football stadium surrounded by farmland on the Llano Estacado in Texas

A high school football stadium sits among cotton fields, reflecting the cultural center of small towns on the Llano Estacado.

Abandoned building facade with pastel toilets outside on the Llano Estacado in Texas

An abandoned building on the Llano Estacado, where discarded fixtures and faded walls blur the line between utility and quiet absurdity.

Black and white photograph of Littlefied, Texas with water tower honoring Waylon Jennings

Water tower in Littlefield, Texas - Hometown of Waylon Jennings

Wind turbines line a distant ridge above the canyon, where industry and landscape quietly coexist on the Llano Estacado.

Black and white photograph of a rural basketball hoop behind a chain link fence on the Llano Estacado

A lone basketball hoop stands behind a chain-link fence, hinting at everyday life and quiet routines on the Llano Estacado.

Black and white photograph of a rural directional road sign on the Llano Estacado

A simple directional sign stands between plowed fields, offering choice without urgency on the Llano Estacado.

Cowboy Photographer

Western Horseman Magazine Names Rob Hammer Among the Best Western Photographers

Being recognized by Western Horseman Magazine is an honor that carries real weight in the world of Western culture. For over 85 years, Western Horseman has documented the lives, traditions, and work ethic of ranchers and cowboys across the American West. Their editorial standards are deeply rooted in authenticity, history, and respect for the people who make a living on horseback.

That’s why being named one of the best Western photographers by Western Horseman is especially meaningful to me.

A Dedication to Authentic Western Photography

My work as a Western and cowboy photographer has never been about staged moments or romanticized versions of ranch life. I’ve spent years traveling throughout the American West, documenting real working cowboys on historic ranches, often in harsh conditions and far from anything resembling a photo shoot.

These are early mornings, long days, weather-beaten faces, and generations of knowledge passed down through hands that still carry ropes, saddles, and responsibility. Photographing this world requires patience, trust, and a deep respect for the culture.

Western Horseman’s recognition reflects that approach — one grounded in observation, honesty, and time spent earning access.

Photographing the Working Cowboy

Much of my photography focuses on:

  • Cowboys and ranch hands at work

  • Western horsemanship and ranch traditions

  • Historic ranches across Texas, New Mexico, Montana, Wyoming, and beyond

  • Quiet moments between the work — where the culture reveals itself

These photographs aren’t about nostalgia for something lost. They’re about documenting a way of life that still exists, often misunderstood or oversimplified. Cowboys today are as committed, skilled, and resilient as ever, and their stories deserve to be told accurately.

Why This Recognition Matters

Being acknowledged by Western Horseman is different from being featured by a general photography publication. It comes from within the culture itself — from a magazine that understands ranching, horsemanship, and Western life at a granular level.

That distinction matters.

For collectors, editors, and brands working in the Western space, this recognition serves as confirmation that the work is rooted in lived experience rather than surface-level aesthetics.

Western Photography for Editorial, Commercial, and Fine Art Use

In addition to editorial storytelling, my Western photography is used in:

  • Commercial and brand campaigns

  • Museum and gallery exhibitions

  • Fine art print collections

The common thread is authenticity. Every image is created in real environments, with real people, and without manufactured narratives.

Thank You to the Western Horseman Community

I’m grateful to Western Horseman for the acknowledgment and to everyone who supports thoughtful documentation of Western culture. Recognition like this reinforces why it’s important to continue investing time in long-term projects that honor the people and traditions of the American West.

View the Cowboy Photography Gallery

Shop Western Home Decor

Best photographer - Western Horseman Magazine

Western Horseman Magazine nomination badge recognizing Rob Hammer as one of the best Western photographers.

The Griffin Museum of Photography

Photography Museum - Winchester, Massachusetts

13+ years now I’ve been photographing traditional barbershops in all 50 states of the USA and the layers continue to peel. In the beginning it was just a thing to do because I love barbershops. Then as time went on I felt responsible for documenting them before they all disappeared. Now, in 2024, I see the collective body of work as a historical document of the barbers and shops that served as a staple in their respective communities for 30, 40, 50, 60+ years. On the surface the theme of this project is about a place to get your haircut. Really though, it’s about community, friendship, and human connection. So I’m honored to announce that a selection of these photographs will be shown at the Griffin Museum of Photography in Winchester, MA for their upcoming group show “Vision(ary) which focuses on communities, cultures, and environments. Please go check out the show as well as the other great exhibitions from June 7th-September 27th.

Click here to purchase a copy of Barbershops of America (photo book) and HERE to purchase prints from this series.

Exhibition at the Griffin Museum of Photography

Barbershops of America at The Griffin Museum of Photography

The Photographic Journal

Basketball Photo Essay - The Photographic Journal

Southern California Basketball Culture

Over the past couple years I’ve been quietly working on a series of photographs about the unique basketball culture that exists in Southern California. It’s been an incredibly fun project and a huge contrast to the American Backcourts photographs of hoops from far off places all across the country. So it’s great to see the series featured on The Photographic Journal - a website that puts together beautiful photo essays. Click HERE to check it out.

American Center for Photographers

American Photography Gallery

Fine Art

May has really shaped up to be a great month in the gallery exhibition category! I’m very grateful to announce that I’ll be showing some of my American photographs at the American Center for Photographers in Wilson, North Carolina. It’s always nice to show work, but this is particularly exciting because it’s the first time I’ve ever exhibited work from this series which started over 13 years ago. Back in 2011 is when my cross country road trips began but the photographs that now make up this series were sort of an after thought. At that time I was solely focused on the Barbershops of America series. So these American photographs were sort of just made during those in-between times when there were no barbershops around. It was years until I even realized that the collective images could be a body of work.

The exhibition which is comprised of 50+/- fine art prints will run from May 1st-26th. So if you’re anywhere near Wilson, please stop in and check them out.

Click here to see photographs from my America series.

Fine art photographs at the American Center for Photographers in Wilson, North Carolina

Photography exhibition at the American Center for Photographers in Wilson, North Carolina

Eugene, Oregon Photo Gallery

Photography at Oregon

Maude Kerns Art Center

Honored to share that 12 of my black and white cowboy photography prints are part of an invitational group show at the Maude Kerns Art Center with Photography at Oregon. Along with my prints will be others by Barbara Bakalarova, Tracy Barbutes, Sarah Grew, Eric Kunsman, Willie Osterman, Osceola Refetoff, and Nolan Streitberger. If you’re in Eugene, Oregon area please stop in to check out the work from May 10-June 7. They will be having an opening reception on May 10th and an artist talk on June 1st. I’m not able to attend either day, but I still encourage you to check out the show.

Click here to shop my fine art cowboy photography prints

Photography exhibition at Maude Kerns Art Center - Eugene, Oregon

Richmond, Virginia Photography Prints

Richmond, VA Wall Art: Fine Art Photography Prints of City Landmarks

I’ve visited Richmond a handful of times, and something about the city keeps drawing me back. It’s not just the history, though I’m fascinated by that, it’s how that history actually feels when you walk its streets. One thing Richmond has that most smaller cities lack, is a tangible vibe. There is no mistaking that Richmond has a storied past, and one that makes it’s current residents very proud. Perhaps that’s why it’s become such a walkable city, so that locals and tourist alike can be immersed in it from ever angle. As a photographer I’ll never forget the miles spent with a camera shooting landmarks like the State Capitol Building, Main Street Station, and the Tyler Potterfield Memorial Bridge. They, and the rest of the cities architectural icons deserve to be celebrated.

Museum Quality Photo Prints of Richmond, VA

Through the lens of fine art photography, Richmond’s timeless appeal comes to life. Fine art photography doesn’t just document these locations, it transforms them into timeless works of art in intricate detail on museum quality archival paper. Each limited edition print is hand signed and number.

Explore Our Collection: Capital Building, Main Street Station, T. Tyler Potterfield Memorial Bridge

Our collection of fine art photography prints of Richmond, Virginia, offers something for everyone. Each piece is crafted to highlight the unique character and charm of the city. From high-contrast black-and-white prints that emphasize the architectural strength of the capital building, to more subdued tones that emphasize the fine details of Richmond’s most historic buildings, there’s a print for every taste.

Available in a range of sizes these prints make perfect additions to any space. Choose a sleek, modern frame for a minimalist look or a classic wooden frame for a more traditional feel.

Why Collect Fine Art Photography of Richmond?

Richmond is more than just a city; it’s a tapestry of history, culture, and natural beauty. Collecting fine art photography of Richmond allows you to celebrate this vibrant place and keep its spirit alive in your daily life. These prints make thoughtful gifts for Richmond locals, former residents, or anyone with a connection to the city.

Whether you’re looking to create a gallery wall in your living room or find a statement piece for your office, fine art photography of Richmond brings character and elegance to any space. Explore our collection and discover the perfect print to celebrate the timeless views of Virginia’s capital.


Black and white photography print of the Capital building in Richmond, Virginia

Photography print of the capital building in Richmond, Virginia

Black and white photograph print of the Manchester Bridge in Richmond, Virginia

Richmond, Virginia Wall Art

Fine art photography print of the Virginia state capital building

Black and white photography print of Main Street Station in Richmond, Virginia

Black and white all art of the train station in Richmond, Virginia

Richmond, VA historic landmark photography

Photography print of the First National Bank Building in Richmond, Virginia

Richmond, Virginia fine art photo prints

Black and white photography print of the Jefferson Hotel in Richmond, Virginia

Iconic landmarks in Richmond, Virginia - Wall Art