Daughter of Nat Jobe, history teacher and department head at Woodberry Forest School, Cary Jobe grew up surrounded by males. Those formative years created a unique combination of adventurous, athletic, artistic, and a woman wanting to connect more deeply with her femininity through her photography.
Cary has lived and worked as a freelance editorial and commercial photographer in Colorado since graduating college. Aside from being a passionate professional photographer for the last three decades, her curiosity and tenacity led her to become an Outward Bound instructor in the Colorado Rockies in her 20s and early 30s and a world traveling photographer throughout her life. She solo trekked in the Himalayas, attended daily sunrise Ashtanga yoga at the Pattabhi Jois Shala in Mysore, shared dal bhat with girls rescued from the brothels of India, and photographed them for an award-winning photo project while living in Nepal and India; many interesting contracted photo assignments followed in Ecuador, Mexico, and Bali.
Cary's connection with water (which portrays freedom, calm, and sensuousness) inspires much of her current work.
Her unique sensibility combined with her warmth creates an indefinable level of trust with her subjects and clients. Departing from traditional photography, Cary's work is sophisticated, romantic, narrative, and rich with emotion.
Cary has created work for clients as diverse as National Geographic, Conde Nast Traveller UK, Chloe, and other fashion labels, as well as the New York Times and many other commercial and editorial contracts.
Over more than two decades covering music, Andy Tennille has had his work – writing, photography and short films – featured in Rolling Stone, NPR Music, Huffington Post, New York Times, Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, Yahoo! Music, Los Angeles Times, Paste, SPIN, among many others.
From 2010 to the band’s final tour in 2017, Andy was the official photographer and documentarian for
Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers. His photography and short films documenting the 2010 Mojo Summer Tour helped earn TomPetty.com a Webby Award nomination. Andy’s photos are featured on several Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers official releases, including Kiss My Amps (2011), Kiss My Amps, Vol. 2 (2013), Hypnotic Eye (2014) and the American Treasure box set (2018).
Andy has also been a frequent contributor to
Tom Petty Radio on Sirius XM, serving as a guest deejay. For the 40th Anniversary tour, he created and produced “The Road Report,” a weekly show aired on Tom Petty Radio that provided regular updates from the 2017 tour including fan, band and crew interviews.
Beyond his time with Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, Andy has also toured with
Widespread Panic and, most recently, Grammy-nominated recording artist
Leon Bridges and Grammy award winning bluegrass artist
Billy Strings. His work has been featured in album and DVD releases for
Jonathan Wilson,
Hard Working Americans,
Hiss Golden Messenger, Widespread Panic,
Tedeschi Trucks Bandand
Bob Weir and used for marketing purposes by companies including
L-Acoustics,
Avid,
Sirius XM,
EAW,
German Light Products,
High Resolution Systems,
Bandit Lights,
Chaos Visual Productions, TRI Studios,
Washburn Guitars,
Duesenberg Guitars and
Modulus Graphite.
In 2014, Andy made his directorial debut collaborating with Hard Working Americans on
a music video for "Blackland Farmer" off their critically acclaimed debut album. In 2011, he helped conceive, plan and co-produce
"Mike Campbell: The Guitars" – a 15-episode web series on the legendary Heartbreaker’s guitar collection - with director Justin Kreutzmann. The following year, Andy was part of a team assembled by TRI Studios to document
Pete Townshend’s book tour for Who I Am, the legendary Who guitarist’s autobiography.
Andy lives in Winston-Salem, NC with his wife, two kids and a dog named Jean.
McNair Evans is a nationally exhibited artist, an active guest lecturer, and represented by galleries in San Francisco, CA and Asheville, NC. McNair grew up in Laurinburg, NC where he worked repairing crossties and tracks for a 32-mile freight railroad. He discovered photography as an anthropology student at Davidson College while recording the oral history for an Appalachian family in Madison County, NC. His projects explore themes of shared experiences and identity amidst forces of modernization, and his photographs present personal, often autobiographical, subject matter in unconventional narrative form. His work is recognized for its literary character and metaphoric use of light.
His first monograph, Confessions for a Son (Owl & Tiger, 2014), explored the lasting psychological landscape of his father’s sudden death and the family’s once successful agricultural business. While the contents of these pictures were highly specific to McNair, his use of light and evocative symbolism to convey metaphor emphasized universal themes—the complex relationship between fathers and sons, the strength of family bonds, and the disappearance of an American agrarian way of life. This subsequent project follows that trajectory by combining original photography with first person, passenger-written accounts. The lives and stories of those traveling on passenger rail illuminate universal tensions between the individuals and society.
McNair is the recipient of numerous awards including a Mineta Transportation Research Fellowship (2023), John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship (2016), the Innovation in Documentary Arts Award from Duke University (2017), and the John Gutmann Photography Fellowship (2014). His photographs have been featured in numerous publications including Harper’s Magazine, New York Times Magazine, and The New Yorker, as well as on the cover of William Faulkner’s novel, Flags in the Dust. His books and prints are held in public and private collections including the SFMOMA, UC Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive, and the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library at Yale University.