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  • Nine-year-old McKayla McCarville stands in the staging area outside of the Burwell arena where the 85th annual Nebraska's Big Rodeo is held. McKayla's father, Kirk McCarville, brought her to the rodeo and McKayla said that she nervously watched him compete in the rodeo's wild horse race. | Personal work<br />
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Chicago Freelance Documentary Photographer | Alyssa Schukar | Photojournalist
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  • “The Great Plains” is a collection of images examining life in what is often considered flyover land. |||<br />
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"This may be a small town, but it's got a big rodeo, and it's got a really big heart," Miss Burwell Rodeo Olivia Hunsperger said. In its 92nd year, the rodeo continues strong and serves as an economic stronghold for a small community in the Sandhills of Nebraska.<br />
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Nebraska's Big Rodeo board member Mike Burnham and Jessa Reinwald, 3, share a saddle as they prepare to go through the Grand Entry during Nebraska's Big Rodeo. The rodeo owes much of its success to board members and other volunteers who give of their time and resources.<br />
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Chicago Freelance Photographer | Alyssa Schukar | Photojournalist
    zGreat Plains14
  • “The Great Plains” is a collection of images examining life in what is often considered flyover land. |||<br />
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Nine-year-old McKayla McCarville stands in the staging area outside of the Burwell arena where the 85th annual Nebraska's Big Rodeo is held. McKayla's father, Kirk McCarville, brought her to the rodeo and McKayla said that she nervously watched him compete in the rodeo's wild horse race. "This may be a small town, but it's got a big rodeo, and it's got a really big heart," Miss Burwell Rodeo Olivia Hunsperger said. In its 92nd year, the rodeo continues strong and serves as an economic stronghold for a small community in the Sandhills of Nebraska. <br />
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Chicago Freelance Photographer | Alyssa Schukar | Photojournalist
    zGreat Plains13
  • Nine-year-old McKayla McCarville stands in the staging area outside of the Burwell arena where the 85th annual Nebraska's Big Rodeo is held. McKayla's father, Kirk McCarville, brought her to the rodeo and McKayla said that she nervously watched him compete in the rodeo's wild horse race. "This may be a small town, but it's got a big rodeo, and it's got a really big heart," 2013 Miss Burwell Rodeo Olivia Hunsperger said. In its 92nd year, the rodeo continues strong and serves as an economic stronghold for a small community in the Sandhills of Nebraska. | Chicago Freelance Photographer | Alyssa Schukar | Photojournalist
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  • Scruffy, a Border Collie, yawns as it makes its way to another branding in the truck belonging to her owner, Joe Mundorf at the Burdick Ranch south of Wood Lake, Neb. The Burdick family, now with four generations working the land, credit their branding success to neighbors and hired hands. "We run a thousand cows," Ben Burdick said. "If you didn't have help, you couldn't operate." | On assignment for the Omaha World-Herald<br />
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Chicago Freelance Documentary Photographer | Alyssa Schukar | Photojournalist
    Oddities09.jpg
  • A calf escapes the rope of Paul Kenner as he and a crew of close to 70 workers corral and brand young calves at the Burdick Ranch south of Wood Lake, Neb., on April 21, 2012. Branding relies heavily on the ranching community. “We run a thousand cows,”€ rancher Ben Burdick said. “€œIf you didn’t have help, you couldn’t operate.” | On assignment for the Omaha World-Herald<br />
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Chicago Freelance Documentary Photographer | Alyssa Schukar | Photojournalist
    docu12.jpg
  • Ben Burdick holds his great-grandsons, Trevor Burdick, 3, at left, and Mason Burdick, 2, before posing for a family picture after lunch at the Burdick Ranch south of Wood Lake, Neb. on Saturday, April 21, 2012. The Burdick family, now with four generations working the land, credit their branding success to neighbors and hire hands. "We run a thousand cows," Ben Burdick said. "If you didn't have help, you couldn't operate." | Chicago Freelance Photographer | Alyssa Schukar | Photojournalist
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  • CHICAGO, ILLINOIS --<br />
Beth Downs, the Project Manager for Statue Stories Chicago, shows Shannon Fuller, the Shedd Aquarium's Brand Marketing Manager, how to scan the QR code in order to listen to the audio recording attached to Stephan Balkenhol's "Man with Fish" outside of the aquarium in Chicago on Wednesday, August 5, 2015.<br />
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Chicago is known for statues that speak to visitors with their lofty expressions, playful forms and enigmatic poses. Now, more than 200 of them will speak more literally with the wave of a cellphone. The project, being unveiled Friday, delivers two-minute cellphone calls from the statues' perspective. The monologues, which are written and performed by artists with roots in Chicago, aim to bring to life everything from the bronze image of Abraham Lincoln, to the lions guarding the Art Institute of Chicago to the 50-foot-tall Picasso in Daley Plaza.<br />
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CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The Wall Street Journal<br />
Slug: "STATUES"
    ChiStatues04.jpg
  • CHICAGO, ILLINOIS --<br />
Beth Downs, the Project Manager for Statue Stories Chicago, shows Shannon Fuller, the Shedd Aquarium's Brand Marketing Manager, how to scan the QR code in order to listen to the audio recording attached to Stephan Balkenhol's "Man with Fish" outside of the aquarium in Chicago on Wednesday, August 5, 2015.<br />
<br />
Chicago is known for statues that speak to visitors with their lofty expressions, playful forms and enigmatic poses. Now, more than 200 of them will speak more literally with the wave of a cellphone. The project, being unveiled Friday, delivers two-minute cellphone calls from the statues' perspective. The monologues, which are written and performed by artists with roots in Chicago, aim to bring to life everything from the bronze image of Abraham Lincoln, to the lions guarding the Art Institute of Chicago to the 50-foot-tall Picasso in Daley Plaza.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The Wall Street Journal<br />
Slug: "STATUES"
    ChiStatues03.jpg
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