A drive to find the source of the energy he uses is what first led Daniel Shea ’07 (Photography B.F.A.) to the coal mining region of Appalachia. “It’s such a bizarre thing, to be so distant from the process behind the light switch,” said Shea, who received the 2007 Meyer Photography Traveling Fellowship from ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ and ended up spending three years documenting the coal industry.
Over the years, the project took on a much different scope as the multiple political and cultural circumstances surrounding modern coal mining practices proved much more interesting,” he said.
Shea surveyed the social and political institutions surrounding mountaintop removal for his series Removing Mountains and later went up river to Ohio to complete a follow-up project, titled Plume, which focused on the communities that live in the shadow of coal-fired power plants. The resulting photographs have been extensively exhibited nationally and internationally and featured in publications including City Paper, Vogue (Korea), and Urbanite, as well as online on NPR’s The Picture Show and Photography for a Greener Planet.
His recent work includes portraiture of President Obama for Fast Company magazine, a New York Times Magazine article "A Speck in the Sea," and he recently covered General Motors for Bloomberg Business Week. He maintains a studio practice and has photographed editorial content for publications such as Time, Wired, The Wall Street Journal, Popular Mechanics, and many more.