and an abandoned town,
drew Minnesota-based
photographer Paul
Johnson, to set out during two different seasons, summer (via kayak) and winter, to witness
and document a lost community,
in the northeast corner of North Dakota lies Devils Lake, it is the largest
natural body of water in the state,
large
trucks sit embedded up to their wheel wells in thick ice,
and empty houses look across the bleak lake,
this is the story,
the
lake began rising in 1993 and has risen 35 feet in just over two decades, due
to a lack of an outlet for the water and a period of heavy rains in the early
1990’s, the high water simply never subsided, rendering the formerly productive
area completely uninhabitable and taking 300 homes with it,
“Abandoned
places hold a wistful appeal to me and I think to many of us,” Johnson shared
in an interview with Passion Passport,
“They are the final chapters of unknown
stories where we’re left to ponder the details. Their quiet stillness can spur
thoughts about the nature of time and the processes of decay and reclamation.”
If you are interested in further reading about the history of the area, Modern
Farmer has a long-form story from the perspective of a Devils Lake
native,
in addition to his still photography, Johnson is continuing to work on animated land art which will be compiled into an upcoming short film, you can see more on Instagram and Tumblr, abandoned towns to me always look erie, more so when they are flooded and the water turns to ice.
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