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Snapshots of the outside world

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Yet another inmate asked for a photo of a gray and white horse in action, perhaps jumping or rearing up on its hind legs and its breath visible in the cold, all combined to “convey the freedom, strength, and the wisdom of nature.” One convicted murderer asked for a photo of a woman sitting by a lake fishing, with an empty chair and a cooler of beer next to her and a Harley-Davidson motorcycle in the background.

Kurina, who was sent to prison for his role in a 1976 double murder in which two people were stabbed to death behind a Chicago bar, said in his handwritten request that he used to climb on the stockyards archway as a child and hoped to see photos of it from different angles.

DeGrane has shown an interest in prisons and prisoners in the past. He had an exhibit of his photographs taken over much of the 1990s at the Cook County Jail and Stateville Correctional Center near Joliet. With Kurina’s request, he said he wanted to “put something positive in someone’s life.”

As he methodically shot the photos, DeGrane wondered if Kurina, who has been behind bars for decades, would recognize the gate.

“It’s probably going to look really different for this guy,” he said.

The focus on inmates rankled Jennifer Bishop-Jenkins, the director of a statewide victims rights group, Illinoisvictims.org. Although she supports closing Tamms, saying its treatment of inmates is “tantamount to torture,” Bishop-Jenkins said the photo project was misdirected.

“I think this can traumatize a victim again because it’s all about the offender,” said Bishop-Jenkins, whose pregnant sister and her sister’s husband were killed in Winnetka in 1990. “You’re talking about many inmates who have killed people and have left behind devastated lives.”

The photographers and the artists who have joined the project have approached it in ways as varied as the requests that were received. Some, like DeGrane, made a point to not learn about the crimes that had sent the inmates to prison. But others studied the backgrounds and found peculiar conflicts. One photographer whose father is a retired police officer and whose brother is still on the police force agreed to take a photo for a Mundelein man convicted of trying to hire someone to kill a police officer and a prosecutor.

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