On his 40-acre retreat he calls "The Edge of the World", Afri-I takes a heated bath in an old clawfoot bathtub.
In 1995, I was part of of team of newsroom photographers and reporters who worked on a special project called “The Ragged Edge of Democracy.” It was a chaotic time in the country after Ruby Ridge and Waco, where the fringes of our society were fearful that the government was coming for them and their guns. One of my stories to illustrate was about a man named Afiri-I, who cut up his Social Security card years before and now lived a frugal existence on the side of a mountain in Stevens County. One visit to his property, I spotted an old bathtub in a meadow. “Hey Afri-I, I said. Do you take a bath in that old tub?” “All the time” he replied. “When your next one,” I inquired “Tuesday,” he said. I took a deep breath, and asked if I could photograph him as he bathed. “Sure, I don’t mind,” he said A few days later, I was back ready to make my photograph of Afiri-I in the old tub. But first he needed to make some preparations. You see, this was a heated bathtub. Afiri-I gathered some wood and started a fire under the tub. Then he hauled buckets of water and poured them in. As steam started to rise from the water, Afiri-I stripped downed got in the tub. He parked his bum on an over-turned cook pot so as not to burn himself from the heat of the fire underneath the tub. I started to make photos and and then something unexpected happen. Afiri-I raised one leg and started to scrub it with a loofa sponge on a stick. Bingo. I knew I had made a memorable photo. I’ve had a framed poster-sized print of this photo hanging in my bathroom for years.
Colin Mulvany The Spokesman-Review
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