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Win a Solo Exhibition in July 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!
Win a Solo Exhibition in July 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!

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By Will Vogt

Publisher: Schilt Publishing
Publication date: April 2026
Print length: 112 pages
Language: English
Price Range:
Will Vogt: Behind the Hedges extends the visual inquiry that began with These Americans, deepening an attentive exploration of ritual, lineage, and belonging within America’s upper circles. Where youthful bravado once animated the frame, a measured composure now prevails. Vogt positions himself both insider and observer, crafting images that hover between intimacy and restraint. The photographs consider a class committed to continuity, attentive to ceremony, and practiced in the art of quiet endurance. In a country often defined by mobility and reinvention, this work lingers on preservation, on gestures repeated across generations, and on the subtle codes that sustain a shared identity.

Vogt turns his lens toward environments rarely granted sustained scrutiny: manicured fairways, sun-bleached beaches, private clubs, racetracks, and expansive hunting grounds stretching across Florida plantations, South Texas ranches, and storied British shooting estates. These settings do not operate as spectacles of wealth but as stages for tradition. Linen jackets, polished silver, weathered saddles, and inherited cottages form a vocabulary of continuity. The camera registers the choreography of seasonal gatherings and sporting rituals—moments of leisure that carry the weight of heritage. Within the larger arc of his ongoing project, A Sporting Life, each series unfolds as a chapter in a broader meditation on custom and community.

Following the acclaim of These Americans, introduced to an international audience at Photo London, Vogt’s practice earns attention from cultural journals and exhibition spaces across the United States. Yet the strength of Behind the Hedges rests less on recognition than on patience. By returning to the same families, fields, and festivities year after year, Vogt constructs an archive of constancy. His photographs suggest that privilege, while visible, remains secondary to the bonds of ritual and memory. In these composed and deliberate images, a portrait of endurance emerges—one shaped not by spectacle, but by the steady cadence of tradition.

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