This Is What Gun Ownership Looks Like in America
In early 2013, on a five-day assignment for the German magazine Stern, photographer Charles Ommanney
traveled around the United States photographing Americans with their
guns. Ommanney has built a career working as a political and documentary
photographer and felt a responsibility to make a story that wasn’t just
another “predictable NRA-bashing” type of series. He wanted to see
“real” people to find out why they wanted to have guns in their homes.
He also decided to shoot the project in a more engaged manner with his
subjects instead of simply being a fly on the wall.
Ommanney said the project took him to six states in the Southern and
Western United States, where he met people who owned guns for
protection, as preparation for when things go “horribly wrong,” or
simply because they like the beauty of weaponry. Instead of
photographing the gun owners at a firing range or at a National Rifle
Association conference, Ommanney wanted to capture them in their homes
to create a sense of “normalcy.”
Charles Ommanney/Reportage by Getty Images
Charles Ommanney/Reportage by Getty Images
Charles Ommanney/Reportage by Getty Images
Ommanney’s favorite photos exhibit this idea of normalcy, including
one of Loigrand De Angelis, who posed for Ommanney with his young son.
“At first glance it’s just a dad with a baby in a Baby Bjorn on his
chest, and then you take a second look and you see he’s strapped up with
a 9mm just inches away from his baby—he never takes that thing off,”
Ommanney said.
Another image, of teenager Elizabeth Lamont with her gun at home in
Virginia, was remarkable for Ommanney because it contrasts Lamont’s
innocence juxtaposed with a deadly weapon. Ommanney was struck by
Lamont’s all-American looks and bedroom décor, as well as by her
admitting doubt about whether she could actually fire a weapon at
another person if she needed to. “That a 17-year-old girl could even be
thinking about that is so foreign to me,” Ommaney said.
From an elderly woman who kept a gun because her mother had been
murdered to a family with two young girls who were well-versed at
stripping down an M16 assault rifle, Ommanney’s series is a striking
cross-section of gun ownership in America.
Charles Ommanney/Reportage by Getty Images
Charles Ommanney/Reportage by Getty Images
Correction, April 7, 2014: The caption on the
second photo (of the Baker family) incorrectly stated that the image was
taken in front of the Baker family's home. It was taken in front of a
closed gas station.
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