NEW YORK, NY.- The photographs in Richard Misrachs Destroy This Memory (Aperture, August, 2010) are an affecting reminder of the physical and psychological impact of Hurricane Katrina as told by those on the ground, and seen through the lens of a contemporary master. Rather than simply surveying the damage, Misrachwho has photographed the region regularly since the 1970s, most notably for his ongoing Cancer Alley projectfound himself drawn to the hurricane-inspired graffiti: messages scrawled in spray paint, crayons, chalk, or whatever materials residents and rescue workers happened to have on hand. At turns threatening, desperate, clinical, and even darkly humorous, the phrases he capturedthe only text that appears in the bookoffer unique and revealing human perspectives on the devastation and shock left in the wake of this disaster. Destroy This Memory presents previously u