 This is the photography of Philip Denman, who brilliantly recorded Laurel Valley Plantation in Tibidale, Louisiana. There's this array of pictures that show change at this plantation from before the Civil War all the way through to today. First, I visited Laurel Valley in 1978 and I spent three summits photographing. I returned in 2005 and documented the need for restoration and returned last year to find out if the restoration had been completed. I thought it was really interesting that the plantation photos that he focused on wasn't the main house building, but he really focused on the smaller outlier buildings. The most wonderful thing about this is that it's all largely intact, and that's thanks to the metal moves that are protected from the harsh elements. So it's a place to see for sure because it's a fantastic example of change over time and a survival of history. We think it's the largest intact sugar plantation landscape in the U.S.A. I think the photographs are beautiful. They're terrific. They're wonderful pictures. It's my legacy. Tulane has promised to keep them in their archives after I leave this world. And that's the biggest... It's for a landy finder to capture.