Fine Art Photography Daily

Greg Miller: Morning Bus

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©Greg Miller, from Morning Bus. published by L’Artiere

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©Greg Miller, Cover of Morning Bus, published by L/Artiere

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©Greg Miller, Cover of Morning Bus, published by L/Artiere

I remember the day it happened. I was in second grade, snuggled beside my mother as we watched their innocent faces fill the television. These images formed a heartbreaking mosaic of the children who lost their lives in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School tragedy. She turned the TV off, shaking her head in disbelief as tears welled in her eyes. I was around the same age as them, and I found myself searching for faces resembling mine. After discovering several, my heart dropped. Growing up as a kid in contemporary America, I conditioned myself to lockdown drills, where my classmates and I would huddle, elbow to elbow, under the creaky wooden desks as a staff member roamed through the hallways, knocking on doors and trying the locks. This was all I knew.

The camera and tragedy share an unmistakable relationship, and I always struggled to stomach those photojournalistic images portraying a despairing reality. From the little I remember as an 8-year-old child, I still recall the tense imagery depicting police officers outside Sandy Hook Elementary School, the sobbing parents, and the shattering vigils. All broadcast across national news. What I never saw that Greg Miller empathetically and masterfully conveyed was the deep personhood of these children—the fact that they were not merely a statistic but bright and beautiful young minds with promising futures violently cut short through our nation’s failing gun control. You cannot walk away from Miller’s photographs without having your soul shaken to the core, especially for the now twenty-something young adults like myself who grew up with Sandy Hook, to feel that tragedy in your bones. To witness the faces of those children as if they were you.

Miller reminds us that they could have been, and his paternal perspective lends itself to the intimacy of the images without sacrificing the urgency and scope regarding chronic school shootings in the United States. His lens is not manipulative. Rather, it embodies the best of photography by striving to cultivate compassion and tenderness. To put faces to the names of those murdered children whom our broken government often neglects. I could not stop sobbing while sitting with each photograph—to many, the Sandy Hook kids are the faceless victims of a distinctly American tragedy, but to Miller, they remain beautiful and brilliant. Their faces and names appear before us in a time when the current administration encourages national forgetting, feeding into an erasure of our own country’s history. Mr. Miller, however, courageously condemns that. Through his visual storytelling and advocacy, he insists that their lives matter and that despite how much we are inundated with gun violence that we must not forget Sandy Hook.

I wiped my seemingly endless tears after turning the final page. Throughout the work, the driveway becomes a launching pad into the dangerous battleground of a classroom, towards the endangered future of an America refusing to acknowledge the individual lives lost to preventable loss. Miller’s foundational body of work makes space for us to grieve, to convene and consider the cost of institutional failure and inhumanity.

In the same way that those small children gaze down an uncertain road, I find myself looking towards a frightening future. Greg Miller’s Morning Bus, published by L’Artiere elegizes Sandy Hook but also elevates the hope that existed within those lives, honoring the late children and reminding us that the only forward is together.

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©Greg Miller, from Morning Bus. published by L’Artiere

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©Greg Miller, from Morning Bus. published by L’Artiere

Morning Bus by Greg Miller was born out of a deeply personal reflection in the wake of the Sandy Hook tragedy. In December 2012, as a parent of a first grader himself, Miller confronted the fragility of childhood and the incomprehensible violence that had shaken his community. Out of that moment came the determination to photograph the quiet ritual of children waiting for the school bus at the edge of their driveways.

For more than twelve years, using his 8×10 view camera, Miller has returned again and again to this subject, portraying children in the early morning light, in fog, rain, or snow, sometimes alone, sometimes accompanied by siblings or parents. These portraits capture a fleeting moment, the threshold between the safety of home and the unpredictability of the world, and transform a familiar daily routine into a powerful metaphor of vulnerability and hope.

Morning Bus is at once intimate and universal. It speaks to the love and protection every parent feels for their child, and to the shared responsibility we all have toward the innocence of childhood. Through more than 60 portraits and a deeply personal text, Miller conveys both the fragility and resilience of childhood, offering a meditation on care, love, and responsibility.

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©Greg Miller, from Morning Bus. published by L’Artiere

Greg Miller (b. 1967, Nashville, Tennessee) is an American fine art photographer and Guggenheim Fellow. Working off chance meetings with strangers and the serendipity of found moments, Miller uses the deliberative nature of a large format 8×10 view camera to explore the intrinsic beauty of ordinary people. His books include Unto Dust (L’Artiere, 2018) exploring Catholic rites of New Yorkers on Ash Wednesday and Morning Bus (L’Artiere, 2025) a meditation on contemporary American childhood through images of children waiting for the morning school bus in rural Connecticut. His work has been exhibited in solo shows at David Salow Gallery, Los Angeles; Tagomago Gallery, Barcelona; and Cheekwood Museum, Nashville; and in group shows at Yossi Milo Gallery, Danziger Gallery, and Sasha Wolf Projects, New York. His photographs are part of the permanent collections of the Museum of the City of New York, The George Eastman Museum and the Cleveland Museum of Art. His work has appeared regularly in advertising and magazines including New Yorker, Esquire, NPR, and many other media outlets. Since 1999, Miller has been a faculty member at the International Center of Photography in New York. He regularly conducts workshops at Maine Media Workshops, Los Angeles Center of Photography, Fotografiska New York, and Penumbra Foundation as well as private workshops.

Instagram: @gregmillerfoto

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©Greg Miller, from Morning Bus. published by L’Artiere

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©Greg Miller, from Morning Bus. published by L’Artiere

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©Greg Miller, from Morning Bus. published by L’Artiere

 

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©Greg Miller, from Morning Bus. published by L’Artiere

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©Greg Miller, from Morning Bus. published by L’Artiere

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©Greg Miller, from Morning Bus. published by L’Artiere

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©Greg Miller, from Morning Bus. published by L’Artiere

About L’Artiere Edizioni

L’Artiere Edizioni is a young publishing house specialised in photography books characterised by the high quality of its products. The publishing house was founded in 2013 from an idea by Gianluca and Gianmarco Gamberini.

Specialised in the presentation of photographic collections, L’Artiere Edizioni strongly believes in the concept of quality and attention to every detail of the finished product, devoting itself to the creation of volumes that are aesthetically pleasing and made to last, not only aimed at expert photographers or collectors, but also at fans or people who simply want to catch up with the world of contemporary photography.

Passion, dedication, technical knowledge and craftsmanship are the cornerstones of our business.

Grafiche dell’Artiere is behind the experience of L’Artiere Edizioni, having transferred a very high level of technical know-how and extensive experience in the field of printing to the young publishing house.

Instagram: @lartiere

Posts on Lenscratch may not be reproduced without the permission of the Lenscratch staff and the photographer.


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