Tim Richmond: ‘Last Best Hiding Place’ – Exploring the Longstanding Myth of the American West

Tim Richmond (b.1959) is a British Photographer based in Colorado specialising in long-term documentary projects. His first book, Last Best Hidning Place, was published in 2015, and his work is housed in many private collections and has been shown internationally. Richmond's work has been featured in L'Uomo Vogue, Telegraph Magazine, Vanity Fair, World of interiors, Wonderland, Port and many others.

USA – 

Deserted streets with beer cans blowing down the road…a cowboy washing his shirts…a train on its way into a million acres of emptiness…a Vietnam vet who lost twenty years of recent memory…a whole town for sale…meth warnings…a tattooed waitress in neon light. All of these inhabit the Last Best Hiding Place.

Places, like people can seem alone, filled with melancholy.

Last Best Hiding Place (2007-2014) is Richmond’s personal and contemporary odyssey through a landscape of filmic references in the American West, revealing stories revealed true or imagined.

The evidence of the American dream is there, but dust covered, closed and un- cherished.

Tim-Richmond

“Published by German publisher Kehrer, Photography Feature – Tim Richmond‘s ‘Last Best Hiding place’, titled for a Montanan slang for living under the radar, is a seven year long-term project, recently put into a book, exploring longstanding myth of the American west. Filled with powerful portraits of local residents, Richmond’s fascination for American west began while growing up with cowboy movies on TV. Documenting life in small towns like Miles City,Montana; Deadwood, South Dakota; and Eureka, Utah, Richmond presents a very honest and beautifully observed view of  rural America.” – Manik Katyal

Related Posts

Mayumi Hosokura: KAZAN

Japan –        THIS STORY CONTAINS EXPLICIT CONTENT Photographer Mayumi Hosokura is known for her works which depict ...

Daisuke Yokata: Site/Cloud

Japan – I see a photo. I took it. Although many decades have not passed since the shoot, I cannot ...

Robert Zhao Renhui: Singapore 1925-2025

Singapore –  The Land Archive chronicles the significant changes in Singapore’s natural and urban landscape that have occurred over a ...

Ayako Mogi: Travelling Tree

Japan – “Travelling Tree” collects photos taken by Photography feature – Ayako Mogi during her peregrinations throughout Europe and Japan ...

Just Like Us : Inside Iran’s Apartments By Palash Krishna Mehrotra

Iran – Iranian Living Room is the first of a series of editorial projects self-published by Fabrica, a think tank ...

Vlad Krasnoshchok & Sergiy Lebedynskyy: “Euromaidan” – Rapidly Changing Ukrainian Chronicles

Ukraine –  “On the 19th of January, 2014 a peaceful protest of Ukrainian Euromaidans on the Hrushevskyi Street in Kiev ...

Hideka Tonomura They Called Me Yukari

Hideka Tonomura: “They Called Me Yukari” – Vivid Fantasy of a Japanese Hostess

Japan –  Hideka Tonomura has left a grave shock in the art scene with her debut collection of photographs, “母恋ハハ・ラブ/ ...

Eriko Koga: “Issan” – Magical visit to 1200 year old monastery in Mt. Koya

Japan – In 2009, photographer Eriko Koga visited Mt. Kōya, home of a 1,200 year old Buddhist monastery in the ...

Michelle Frankfurter Destino

Douglas Stockdale on Michelle Frankfurter “Destino”

USA –  This is my first review of the photobook series published by FotoEvidence, a non-profit organization that focuses on ...