• GOOD GODDAMN by Bryan Schumaat, Trespasser
  • GOOD GODDAMN by Bryan Schumaat, Trespasser
  • GOOD GODDAMN by Bryan Schumaat, Trespasser
  • GOOD GODDAMN by Bryan Schumaat, Trespasser
  • GOOD GODDAMN by Bryan Schumaat, Trespasser
  • GOOD GODDAMN by Bryan Schumaat, Trespasser
  • GOOD GODDAMN by Bryan Schumaat, Trespasser
  • GOOD GODDAMN by Bryan Schumaat, Trespasser

    GOOD GODDAMN by Bryan Schumaat, Trespasser

    Regular price $200.00

    9 × 12 in
    44 pages
    Softcover carton-staple binding
    Trespasser, 2017
    First and second editions of 750


    Good Goddamn is a short photobook about a man named Kris from rural Texas and his last few days of freedom before going to prison.

    The cast of characters, besides Kris himself and the bleak mid-winter Texan landscape, are an old pickup truck and a hunting rifle with a very business-like telescopic sight... So far this is a typically male Texan as we imagine them, tough guys who never cry, but the macho surface image is thoroughly undercut by the book’s elegiac tone and complex emotional mood. There is a general aura of wistfulness, not to say sadness, but also encompassing moments of reflection, uncertainty, loneliness, and bitter reflection, making for a concerto of shifting emotions in which the bare, gloomy landscape pulls the strings. The constant background is the expectation that what will follow will be a life changing experience for Kris, and not, at least in the short term, a good one.

    All this is suggested by Schutmaat’s exceedingly well judged photographs... One can almost feel the damp. Yet even a bleak, damp landscape will be a great loss when you are behind bars. I call the portraits indeterminate, not because they are soft in focus, but because they have an unsettling quality, which may come from nothing more than the sight of Kris in a short-sleeved tee shirt in a winter landscape—even though we are told that the weather was unseasonably warm during the shoot. Of course, it is more than that, Schutmaat has conveyed the psychology of this moment in Kris’ life unerringly, and makes us feel it too. Little wonder we are disturbed and unsettled.”

    —Gerry Badger, from his review of Good Goddamn at 1000 Words Magazine.


    This publication was generously made available by the artist and is sold out elsewhere.