9th Floor by Jessica Dimmock

My friend Shannon Greer sent a link for THE NINETH FLOOR by Jessica Dimmock.

The site describes the series of photos as documenting a group of addicts who moved into the apartment of a former millionaire in a wealthy neighborhood in downtown Manhattan. Joe Smith, in his mid 60s, allowed a young addict to move into a spare bedroom in his large three-bedroom apartment in hopes of gaining rent. Several years later, a fully addicted Joe no longer had a bedroom and as many as 12 to 15 young addicts stayed at any given time. All electricity and hot water had been turned off and anything valuable had long been sold to feed habits.

This project documents the residents of this space leading up to their eviction and follows several of them after as they face jail and sickness, fight and love, attempt to get clean, sink deeper into addiction, go to jail, start families and struggle to survive.

This photo series doesn’t pull any punches of a world without glamor.

I had lived through the 1970s. Every junkie in the East Village thought they were indestructible.

Youth dared death.

Heroin dared back so many times the winner.

Friends refused to believe a drug could be stronger than them.

They were proven wrong in so many way and THE NINETH FLOOR by Jessica Dimmock shows a world lost by the lost.

To view THE NINETH FLOOR please go to the following URL

http://viiphoto.com/articles/the-ninth-floor/

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