"Everything as it was": Explore the bedrooms of kids killed in school shootings

1 month ago 14

An unmade bed

A library book 12 years overdue

The next day’s outfit

Notes to her future self

Click on the door to enter

Photographing the rooms of kids killed in school shootings

The families of eight school shooting victims opened their doors to Steve Hartman and photographer Lou Bopp, allowing them to document their children's bedrooms, just as they left them.

Each room waits for a child who will not return.

Their parents hope that these images will stick with you, that you'll carry a piece of their collective pain and use your heartache to help bring about change.

From Steve Hartman: "I never wanted to be this kind of reporter"

Steve Hartman Steve Hartman CBS News

I never wanted to be this kind of reporter, knocking on the door of someone who lost a child in a school shooting. And yet here I stand, knocking, nonetheless.

I found myself here, standing on the threshold of grief across the country, after years of pent-up frustration. By 2018, America's school shooting epidemic had taken a toll on me. There were so many that the news coverage felt like a treadmill. It seemed to me the country had grown numb and lost its empathy for the victims and the families. I wanted to do something.

For help, I reached out to Lou Bopp, one of the best still photographers in the country. But he said he had never faced a challenge quite like this: "to take a portrait of a person who's not there."

Read more from Steve about this project here.

Photographer Lou Bopp: "How do you make a portrait of a child who is not there?"

lou-bopp-hs-rooms.jpg Lou Bopp

I am an on-location commercial photographer, photographing people and pets on-location for large brands, per my LinkedIn professional profile. Yet here I was, on a project where there was no one to take photos of -- for the most brutal of reasons. How do you make a portrait of a child who is not there?

Their personalities shone through in the smallest details of their untouched rooms -- hair ties on a doorknob, a toothpaste tube left uncapped, a ripped ticket for a school event -- allowing me to uncover glimpses as to who they were.

Over the course of more than six years, we visited with many families. But each time I received a call or text from Steve about a new family, my heart sank. It meant another family had lost a child.

Read more from Lou about this project here.

LouBopp.com | Instagram | LinkedIn

Credits

Photography: Lou Bopp | Photo retouching: Danny Hommes | Reporting: Steve Hartman | Visual design and development: Grace Manthey, Taylor Johnston | Digital production: Jamie Reysen, Paula Cohen, Allison Elyse Gualtieri, Jennifer Earl | Production: Jessica Opatich, Roxanne Feitel, Katie Brennan

Special Thanks

Ilan and Lori Alhadeff, Philip and April Schentrup, Tom and Gena Hoyer, Joel and JoAnn Bacon, Chad and Jada Scruggs, Javier and Gloria Cazares, Frank and Nancy Blackwell, Bryan and Cindy Muehlberger

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