Navigate to the organizationโs website and youโll find the phrase โa site of possibilityโ hovering above a grainy rendering of a barnlike structure. Navigate to that structure, deep in the woods, and youโll find people milling about murmuring words like โresolutionโ and โbalanceโ; venture further, and youโll find yourself in a glowing, windowless red room.
Is this a secret society? A religious cult from the 1970s?
No: This is PHOTO FARM, a capacious new photography space on the outskirts of Chapel Hill founded by photographer Phyllis B. Dooney. It opened in September and offers artists studio space, workshops, and a well-appointed darkroom. And if thereโs any shared religion here, itโs the documentary arts.
On this particular day, the group of 15-to-20 milling about is Photobook Dummies, a monthly meetup organized by photographer Ryan Helsel in which photography lovers gather to showcase photobooks.
Todayโs meetup is organized around โportraits,โ a broad theme represented, โhere, in photobooks featuring the colorful geometry of William Eggleston and the black-and-white counterculture of Mary Ellen Mark; one book, by Canadian photojournalist Donald Weber, depicts police interrogations in Ukraine.
One attendee shows up wearing a leather jacket with a photo of Cindy Sherman on the backโโon theme,โ someone comments.

Helsel kicks things off, holding up Sarah Stolfaโs 2019 photobook The Regulars, taken by Stolfa at the Philadelphia dive where she worked as a longtime bartender.
Spread out on the table, the barside photosโglossy and dark, like a Guinnessโtease at some urban and mysterious ache, something that canโt be articulated in words but can be gestured toward on film.
โI loved watching Cheers as a kidโliterally as a kid,โ one attendee says, reacting to the bar photos. โIt made me feel nostalgic, even though I was eight.โ
This is the first time Photobook Dummies has met at PHOTO FARM, but itโs exactly the kind of group that Dooney, who runs the space alongside operations and outreach coordinator Rachel Jessen, hopes to draw.
โI donโt think Iโm the only one who recognizes that there are a bunch of creative folks in the Triangle, and photo people, and a lot of us have managed to not know each other,โ says Jessen. โHopefully, PHOTO FARM will be a great place to connect.โ
Dooney and Jessen met while pursuing MFAs in experimental documentary studies at Duke University, where they graduated from in 2018.
Dooney had long dreamed of opening a photography space and says that a series of events, including the onset of the pandemic, prompted her to take the plunge.
โWe were all kind of like, โHuh, what do I want to do for the rest of my life after this weird moment in time that I never expected?โโ Dooney says of the pandemic. โIt was a moment where I was like, โShitโlife, you know, doesnโt go on forever. I gotta do what Iโm gonna do, Iโm getting old and itโs time to start the next chapter.โโ
A plot of land on a tree farm, just southwest of Southern Village, proved the perfect place to begin that next chapter. The 2400-square-foot space, designed by Jose Lopez of Habanero Architecture, is sleek and airy, fitted with white oak millwork and engineered wood. The studio faces south; today, it filters in crisp October light.

The Triangle has long had a rich documentary arts scene. Thereโs the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke, founded in 1989, which includes disciplines like photography, among other kinds of overlapping documentary arts. Thereโs the annual CLICK! Photography Festival and there are numerous museums and creative institutions like Cassilhaus, PEEL Gallery, Shadowbox Studio, and Horse & Buggy Press that offer books, exhibits, and programming.ย
All this has undoubtedly made the area a Southern photography polestar, though the scene is scattered and, with inflation and real estate high, the going can be tough for artists trying to build something. (The Center for Documentary Studies, too, has had a rocky road in recent years.)
PHOTO FARM, remote though it may be, is an opportunity for the photography community to have something of a home baseโand to have its reputation amplified.
โIโm excited about PHOTO FARM on so many levels,โ Harrison Haynes, a Chapel Hill artist, writes over email. โItโs thrilling to see Phyllis, a fellow visual artist, make such an organized and forward-thinking investment in the local art community.โ
This fallโs programming includes darkroom basics, bookbinding techniques, and a tintype pop-up, the space also sometimes holds open studio and portrait studio hours.
Dooney says she is currently fundraising for fellowships to make programming more accessible. The Southern Documentary Fund is PHOTO FARMโs fiscal sponsor, and Dooneyโwho also teaches photography, as does Jessenโstresses that she wants it to be a site of education where amateurs as well as professionals can be drawn into the fold.
Or, as the website tells it: โWe are all teachers and students in one lifetime. PHOTO FARM provides the space to be both.โ
This ethos checks out: at the photobook meetup, the barrier to entry is no higher than an interest in the visual and narrative, the analog and the lost art of appreciating what goes into a compelling image.
โI think weโre filling a need, and perhaps for some people, they donโt even know itโs a need they have,โ Jessen says. โI hope people recognize itโs a place for everyone.โ
Follow Culture Editor Sarah Edwards on Twitter or email [email protected].


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