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Ditch: Montauk, New York, 11954

Afterword by Wayne Koestenbaum / Introduction by Rufus Wainwright / Text by Jorn Weisbrodt
Published by powerHouse Books
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

About The Book

Nat Ward’s DITCH: MONTAUK, NY 11954—a bustling photographic excursion to Montauk’s most famous beach—brings to light the never-before-seen high/low culture on a beach known for being a low-key celebrity/local hangout. Emblematic of the laidback life of its fishing village origins-turned-Hamptons-hot-to-go summer, the viewer gleans a rare insight into the not-so-secret life of Manhattan's elite and Montauk locals, all peacefully coexisting at the same surfing break, itself renowned among surfers. Accompanied by an essay from renowned musician Rufus Wainwright and his husband, Jörn Weisbrodt, along with an afterword from acclaimed poet and essayist Wayne Koestenbaum, Nat Ward’s sprawling black and white panoramas of Ditch Plains Beach revel in the human drama that makes DITCH the perfect beach chill, sure to spark interest from your creatives, influencers, and blue collar buds all year round.

Stumbling down a makeshift path through a sand cliff in 2018, Ward found the crowded, raucous reality of Ditch Plains, Montauk’s most famous surf beach. It’s a place where families, surfers, retirees, artists and writers, social media influencers, contractors, landscapers, celebrities, and day traders all crush together on the rocky shore for a day. This books brings to light the high/low culture on a beach known for being a low-key celebrity hideout. Emblematic of a laid back fishing village that became swanky. It is a place where politics are more unseemly than naked flesh, where human pleasure is sought out in public view. Struck by this libertine opposition to antagonistic norms, Ward photographed the denizens of Ditch every day for four summers. In the process, Ward became a fully-fledged member of the eclectic tribe: a half-naked, long-haired character with a clown camera that no one could miss.

The photographs in DITCH: MONTAUK, NY 11954 navigate the trickier engagements of looking and being looked at: the epic sweep of multiple dramas playing out across the sand, the confrontations, the seductions, the freedom to be a body amongst other bodies splayed in public, the hints at desire and reticence, the skin, the sun, the heat, the salt, the slippages of masculinity and femininity performed, the lounging in a way that purposefully conceals or reveals, the unexpected and clarion gestures of children, the futility in the drive to hold on to youthful appearance, and the inevitable process of aging toward an entropic end.

Ward’s panoramas are inspired by the visual energy of American photographic masters Helen Levitt, Weegee, and Lisette Model, along with Italian Neorealist standouts like Vittorio de Sica’s The Bicycle Thieves and Rossellini’s Rome, Open City.

Legendary musician, queer icon, and long-time Montauk resident Rufus Wainwright contributes an introduction in collaboration with his husband, Jorn Weisbrodt, that provides insight into the history of Montauk and delves into the intimate, social, and psychological realities of the beach as featured in Ward’s panoramic efforts. And a signal afterword by renowned poet, iconoclast, and cultural critic Wayne Koestenbaum parses the visceral, sensual pleasure to be found in these images while also leaning into the idea that pleasure of this sort must serve as an inspiration toward a radical departure from the monomania and divisive strife of everyday life.

About The Author

Nat Ward lives in Queens, NY. His work is collected by the Museum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Parrish Art Museum, and the Museum of Fine Arts Houston. His previous book of photographs and poetry, Big Throat, was published by +KGP in 2020. Ward founded the collaborative photographic project space A New Nothing with Ben Alper in 2014 and has had features on his photographic work published in Aperture, Interview, Collector Daily, Photobook Journal, Photography & Culture, C4, The British Journal of Photography, Unseen, Vogue, Vogue Italia, Vice, and Juxtapoz. He has exhibited photographic and text-based installations at Nathalie Karg Gallery, New York Live Arts, Hampshire College, and The Jewish Museum. Ward has been awarded residencies and fellowships from Yaddo, The Cooper Union Professional Development Fund, the Edward F. Albee Foundation, and The Sharpe-Walentas Studio Program. His poetry and critical writing have appeared in publications from Wendy’s Subway, 1080Press, The Brooklyn Review, and Beautiful Days Press. Ward’s poems appear alongside photographs by Sara J. Winson and Aaron Canopy in Shades, published by Push Pull Editions (2024). Ward holds an MFA in Visual Art from Columbia University and an MFA in Poetry from Brooklyn College.

Product Details

  • Publisher: powerHouse Books (July 16, 2025)
  • Length: 112 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781648231018

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Raves and Reviews

Ditch: Montauk, New York 11954, gave me the gift the intimacy of the beach provides. Here, we can all take off our clothes, let go, leave behind our divisions, and be ourselves—together.

– Elinor Carucci, Photographer

In a moment of increasing sociopolitical divisiveness, Nat Ward's visions of the beach at Ditch Plains are a salve: A crush of humanity, tolerant, stripped-down, sharing space, baking in the sun, under horizon lines that speak like relieved breaths.

– Dean Daderko, Chief Curator, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis

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