Lisa Barlow: Holy Land U.S.A.

In the summer of 1980, Lisa Barlow was driving along Connecticut’s Route 69 in a worn-out rental car when she spotted a massive cross towering above the highway.
Barlow had heard about Holy Land U.S.A. before but had never come face-to-face with the detailed, miniature replica of Jerusalem. The site featured vivid biblical scenes with teachings and scripture quotes etched into concrete.
There was Pilate’s house, an Inn with a “No Vacancy” sign, a white-painted lump representing Lot’s wife turned into salt, and a somber-looking Lucifer locked inside a small dog cage. The display, built two decades earlier from concrete, plaster, wire, and wood, had been only minimally updated with modern materials like plastic and aluminum siding. The cracked “Stairway to Heaven” led up the hill, bordered by a chain-link fence, while the Garden of Eden had been completely swallowed by thick vines beneath a tin canopy. From this vantage point, Barlow first glimpsed the city of Waterbury below, with its church spires and factory smokestacks juxtaposed against the tiny buildings of Holy Land at her feet.
“Before long, it wasn’t just Holy Land that kept drawing me back to Waterbury,” Barlow recalls. “It was the people—their stories captured my heart, my imagination, and ultimately, my love. This is the story of that year, told in pictures.”
Barlow’s photographs of Waterbury and its uniquely American quirks are filled with a deep empathy and layered visual storytelling that reveals something new with each viewing.

A portrait of Lisa Barlow

About the Author

Lisa Barlow is a photographer based in Brooklyn, Colorado, and Mexico City. Over the course of her long career, she has worked as a documentarian for Public Television, taught at three private schools in New York City, and contributed as a writer for the International Center of Photography. She is a member of the 2022 cohort of the Penumbra Foundation Long Term Book Project and the 2023 Chico Review. Currently, she is also part of Janelle Lynch’s Welcome to the Salon. Described as a “narrative storyteller,” Barlow’s photography focuses on capturing people and places, aiming to reveal the sometimes startling poetry and drama that emerge from these encounters. Like many photographers, Barlow revisited her archive during the Pandemic. It was then that she rediscovered her Holy Land U.S.A. series, created during her undergraduate studies at Yale. This work earned her the Norman Holmes Pearson Prize in American Studies and has influenced the direction of her photography ever since.

Hardcover / Foil stamped: 104 pages
Publisher: Stanley Barker (2024)
Language: English
Size: 12.99 x 9.64 inches


Log in with your credentials

or    

Forgot your details?

Create Account