After many adventures, Tom Blagden Jr. is back home

SALISBURY — After 42 years of living primarily in Charleston, S.C., photographer and Lakeville native Tom Blagden Jr. has moved back to the small town he grew up in — and it’s quite the homecoming. 

The entrance of The Hotchkiss School, which Blagden attended in the 1960s and where his father, Tom Blagden, taught art, now features mural-sized prints of his photographs of the campus. They will remain on display for the next two years. 

This year also marks the 50th anniversary of Blagden’s graduation from the preparatory school, and Blagden and his wife, Lynn, will host a party at their home for the class of ’69 as the first night of the school’s reunion celebration in September. 

Also in September, Blagden will be part of The White Hart Speaker Series in collaboration with Oblong Books and Scoville Memorial Library on Thursday, Sept. 12. He will talk about his newest book, published by Rizzoli, “The Grand Canyon: Unseen Beauty: Running The Colorado River.”

For Blagden, the return to Lakeville is centered around a feeling of stability he sees in the rural landscape, especially compared to Charleston, which has become particularly vulnerable to the effects of both urban tourism and climate change. 

“Everywhere that I’ve spent time has changed so much that to me, the Northwest Corner has really kept its integrity for the most part,” Blagden said. He was speaking by phone, while spending time in Maine. 

“Everything changes, but there’s such a strong land ethic in Lakeville. That’s what has pulled my wife and me back to living here full time.” 

In the 1960s Hotchkiss was a boys school that Blagden describes as culturally focused on athletics, while he had grown up on the land, with an artistic appreciation for the natural surroundings he felt other boys took for granted. 

“Sports were our main outlet and our main source of camaraderie. I played lacrosse in the spring until I got injured, and after I was injured I worked in a conservation project planting trees around the area,” Blagden said. 

“I was frustrated at the time that nothing in the Hotchkiss curriculum really related to the immediate landscape of the campus. Conversation came naturally to me, but so did observing the aesthetics of nature. It led me into photography.”

The subjects of his photography books span climate and location, from South Carolina’s wetlands and cypress swamps to the crashing waves on the dark cliffs of Acadia National Park in Maine. 

“Looking for creativity in nature comes down to not seeing the natural world as made up of objects, but made up of relationships,” Blagden said, speaking to the philosophy behind his long photography career. “It’s about discovering and creatively defining those relationships, which are just as much a function of light and color and texture and form as of the individual objects themselves.”

“Grand Canyon: Unseen Beauty” is the culmination of 14 annual spring trips rafting down the river. Light, aqua-hued water the color of sea glass splashes across the page in stunning action shots that contrast with the still majesty of Blagden’s photographs gazing up at the imposing canyon walls lit orange by the sun — a ver`y different perspective than one sees in the typical tourist selfie. 

Through Blagden’s lens we see pelicans with outstretched wings, grasshoppers crawling between the needles of cactus, desert rams with spiraled horns and a bobcat staring Blagden down, golden eyes wide. 

“There is one photo in the book that’s extremely important to me,” he said. “One of my best friends went on the trip to the Grand Canyon with me twice, but after his second trip he died very unexpectedly. On the following trip, I took an urn with his ashes and poured them into the river and this spectacular rainbow came out. I had seen only a few rainbows on these trips, because it’s a dry time of the year in April.” 

The photo appears in the book with the caption “Robbie’s rainbow.’”

Latest News

Roomful of Blues set for April 17 show at Infinity Hall in Norfolk
Photo provided

NORFOLK –Roomful of Blues, the Rhode Island-based band hailed by DownBeat magazine as being “in a class by themselves,” will bring its mix of blues, jump, swing, boogie-woogie and soul to Infinity Hall in Norfolk on Friday, April 17, at 8 p.m.

The long-running group, formed in 1967, is touring behind its Alligator Records album Steppin’ Out!, released in late 2025.

Keep ReadingShow less

Robert E. Stapf Sr.

Robert E. Stapf Sr.

MILLERTON — Robert E. Stapf Sr. (Bobbo), a devoted husband, loving father, grandfather, great grandfather, brother and friend to many, passed away peacefully on April 9, 2026, at the age of 77, happily at home surrounded by lots and lots of love and with the best care ever.

Bob was born Jan. 16, 1949, to the late Peter and Dorothy (Fountain) Stapf. He began working at an early age, met his forever love, Sandy, in 7th grade and later graduated from Pine Plains Central School.

Keep ReadingShow less

Michael Joseph Carabine

Michael Joseph Carabine

SHARON — Michael Joseph Carabine, 81, of Sharon, Connecticut, passed away on the morning of Friday, April 3, 2026, at Bryn Mawr Hospital in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. He was the beloved husband of the late Angela Derrico Carabine and loving father to Caitlin Carabine McLean.

Michael was born on April 23, 1944, in Bronx, New York. He was the son of the late Thomas and Kathleen Carabine of New York.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

Chion Wolf brings ‘Audacious’ radio show to Winsted with show-and-tell event
Nils Johnson, co-founder and president of The Little Red Barn Brewers in Winsted, hosted Chion Wolf and her Connecticut Public show “Audacious LIVE: Show and Tell,” which was broadcast on April 8, drawing a sold-out crowd.
Jennifer Almquist

The parking lot of The Little Red Barn Brewers in Winsted was full on Wednesday, April 8, as more than 100 people from 43 Connecticut towns — including New Haven and Vernon — arrived carrying personal treasures for a live taping of “Audacious LIVE Show & Tell.”

Chion Wolf, host and producer of Connecticut Public’s “Audacious,” and her crew, led by production manager Maegn Boone, brought the program to the packed brewery for an evening of story-driven conversation and shared keepsakes.

Keep ReadingShow less
Marge Parkhurst, the preservation detective

Marge Parkhurst with a collection of historic nails recovered from wall cavities during restoration work.

Photo courtesy of Marge Parkhurst/Cottage & Country Painting Company
Walls still surprise me. If you look hard enough, you can find buried treasure.
Marge Parkhurst

After nearly 50 years of painting some of Litchfield County’s oldest homes and landmark properties, Marge Parkhurst has developed an eye for the past—reading the clues left behind in stenciled vines, forgotten bottles and newspapers tucked into walls, each revealing a small but vivid piece of Connecticut history.

Parkhurst was stripping wallpaper in a farmhouse in Colebrook — the kind of historic home she has spent decades restoring — when she noticed something odd. Three layers of paper had already come off — each one a different era’s idea of decoration — and beneath them, just barely visible under dull, off-white plaster, a pattern emerged.

Keep ReadingShow less
Wings of Spring performance at the Mahaiwe Theater
Adam Golka
Provided

On Sunday, April 19, at 4 p.m., Close Encounters With Music (CEWM) presents On the Wings of Song at the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center in Great Barrington.

The program focuses on Robert Schumann’s spellbinding song cycle Dichterliebe (“A Poet’s Love”), a setting of sixteen poems by Heinrich Heine that explores love, longing, and the redemptive power of beauty. Featured artists include John Moore, baritone; Adam Golka, pianist; Miranda Cuckson, viola; and Yehuda Hanani, cello.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.