ABERDEEN, WA – A GLIMPSE OF THE PAST

Something unfailingly draws one’s interest within the old portions of Aberdeen, Washington, where the Chehalis and Wishkah Rivers confluence, the tops of cutoff piles from previous piers and buildings exposed at low tide, a hint to the long-ago heyday of the town. What did those piles support and what did they serve? What stories they could tell, if such stories were available to be heard?

Aberdeen has the beauty inherent to the Pacific Northwest, the moody, overcast, rainy days the region is known for. Her old-town alleyways exhibit both lonely desolation and occasional gestures of beauty. One could almost decipher the whispered stories through blowing trash and graffiti-filled walls of boarded up abandoned buildings, broken windows allowing diffused light to penetrate the shards of glass, a partial glimpse into spaces whose glorious history is now long past.

A Glimpse of the Past covers a nearly five-year window into Aberdeen’s recent past, depicting a sprinkling of the scenes witnessed during walking sojourns through older portions of town (to read more about the collection click here).