| Bill Steber
Biography
Bill Steber was born and raised in middle Tennessee and his interest
in photography began in elementary school as he used one of his
father’s cameras on school trips and Boy Scout campouts. It
was on one such campout at age 11 that Steber took an abstract photo
that gave him what would be his first published photo.
After attaining degrees in Photography and English from Middle Tennessee
State University, Steber spent the next 15 years making a name for
himself in journalism, working as a staff photojournalist for the
Tennessean in Nashville and winning dozens of regional and national
photography awards.
But it was for work outside the newspaper that Steber is best known.
In 1992, he found a way to combine his passions for photography
and music by beginning an ambitious photographic survey of Blues
culture in Mississippi with an old Hasselblad camera and lots of
black and white film. Since then, he has set out to document every
living blues musician associated with Mississippi as well as most
of the state’s juke joints, churches, river baptisms, hoodoo
practitioners, traditional farming methods, folk traditions and
every other cultural tradition that gave birth to or influenced
the Blues.
Steber won grants to support this work from The Maine Photographic
Workshops and the Morrie Camhi award as well as being an Alicia
Patterson Foundation fellow in 1998 that gave him a year-long sabbatical
from the Tennessean to pursue the Blues project. He has shown his
work in galleries and museums around the country including a one-man
show at the Saba Gallery in New York that was featured in the New
Yorker magazine in 2000.
Currently, Steber is a freelance photographer living in Murfreesboro,
TN. His editorial work is published in regional, national and international
magazines. The Mississippi work is represented by art galleries
around the country. He has plans to publish four books from the
Mississippi Blues project, combining the still photos with extensive
interviews, writings, audio and video collected in the field to
create a comprehensive survey of Mississippi blues culture that
represents more than a decade of the region’s history.
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