




I moved to South Philadelphia about two years ago from rural Idaho. It was quite a shock to be in an urban inner city again, and I was surprised by how put off I was by the environment. It was only until I started exploring this specific part of Philadelphia at dusk that I was able to approach it as a photographic subject. Exploring streets and finding isolated moments of serenity became my way of coming to terms with this city. I became interested in the relationship between evacuated spaces, and contained lives in the cityscape. Focusing on the young people that live here is another way of revealing quiet beauty under a rough exterior. Through juxtaposition of portraits with the lived environment a more personal vision of this hostile terrain presents itself. By focusing on South Philadelphia's individual aspects I am documenting the place that I see, and am now proud to call home.
Justin James Reed was born in Oregon in 1980. He has lived all over the United States, and currently makes Pennsylvania his home.
Justin received his BFA from the Minneapolis College of Art & Design and his MFA from the Tyler School of Art. He has worked as an intern at the Polaroid 20x24 Studio and as a color printer and assistant for photographer Alec Soth. His photographs have been exhibited nationally and internationally, including at Jen Bekman Gallery in 2007 where he was featured as a Spring 2007 Hot Shot.
He is an adjunct professor of photography at the Tyler School of Art, Pennsylvania College of Art & Design, and The College of New Jersey. His photographs currently focus on the suburban communities and their infrastructure that are becoming an integral part of the American experience.