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Scattered, smothered and curated: Micah Cash photographs Waffle House

Micah Cash, “Store #1449: Calvert City, Kentucky,” 2018. Archival pigment print, 24 × 30 inches. Collection of the artist. (Submitted photo)

Waffle House is an iconic part of everyday life in the South.

The restaurant chain was founded in 1955 in Avondale Estates, Georgia, and has over 1,900 locations spread across 25 states. The interior of each restaurant is familiar, with 1960s-era globe lights hanging from the ceiling and red leather-upholstered booths appearing in many locations. But what’s outside the windows is different for each store.

Micah Cash (Submitted photo)

Micah Cash started photographing what he calls “Waffle House Vistas” in 2018. His series of images taken from inside different Waffle Houses, looking out, became a popular book published by the Bitter Southerner, and now it’s a museum exhibition.

The Georgia Museum of Art presents “Waffle House Vistas,” an exhibition of several of Cash’s photographs plus a newly commissioned time-based work on the same topic, from Aug. 24, 2024, through June 1, 2025.

The natural landscapes beyond the windowpanes are as diverse as the perspectives and stories of each guest. Yet the similarities of the restaurants’ interiors echo across states and time zones. These familiar, well-worn interiors make guests think about what they have in common, and the differences of the outside environment call to mind their different experiences.

“At its best, Waffle House creates a sense of belonging unlike most other places. Waffle House does not care how much you are worth, what you look like, where you are from, what your political beliefs are, or where you’ve been so long as you respect the unwritten rules of Waffle House: Be kind, be respectful, and don’t overstay when others are waiting for a table. Besides, everyone who has ever stepped foot in a Waffle House has a story to tell,” Cash said.

Related events include:

Student Night is sponsored by the UGA Parents Leadership Council. All programs are free and open to the public unless otherwise indicated.

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