![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjVaQpc0C3l8LYlhGK2hXYdqjYNtBqnoSSMD9cLvmMOXdIkSx7WaYV64-DzwYj2IsQ611w87XD3le9FXXoBaDnDyEin48pE3sp4KZYMCQsrl9T-ToVzcyfyde1gZIWBUjLkbAeSD3RirK8/s400/UnknownPool.jpg)
I have a thing for
pool photographs. I'm really drawn to them for some reason. Even when they are sketchy and dirty. Almost especially when they're sketchy and dirty. I can't figure out why they're so appealing, but there's something almost erotically exhibitionist about the whole thing. (Is that weird?:)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiLq2AgZ9EsVuhGLvcW7ImiEb2EF-VHdP2ovKPZouYImQPA8C3iLG1uy1Qz16V7TZdSY9lc3RLNXf6Uj6VrEPuxmh1arLGakK5Um5MPO1SagCecXjJRrOIKD5tbXeneaZndymGmL0Rrfzs/s400/AlpineTexas.jpg)
These shots are from J. Bennett Fitt's
No Lifeguard On Duty series. In a
New York Times review of the exhibition, Ken Johnson writes: "Swimming pools are signs of spiritual optimism, economic prosperity and the hedonistic good life, so the image of a pool dried up and cracked or half full of dirty water becomes a symbol of disappointed hopes and dreams."
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