Arts & Culture

Wild Horses of Cumberland Island

With stunning photography, a new book gives an up-close look at some of Georgia’s most majestic residents

Through her lens, photographer Anouk Masson Krantz has gotten closer to the equine inhabitants of Cumberland Island, Georgia, than just about anyone. Share her view in the new book, Wild Horses of Cumberland Island, which showcases not only the coastal preserve that was once a getaway for the Carnegie family, but the horses who have roamed among its old-growth maritime forest and tidal estuaries for generations.


EYES, 2013

EYES, 2013

Photo: ANOUK MASSON KRANTZ

SUNRAY, 2016

SUNRAY, 2016

Photo: ANOUK MASSON KRANTZ

SOUTH MARSH, 2013

SOUTH MARSH, 2013

Photo: ANOUK MASSON KRANTZ

PLACID, 2011

PLACID, 2011

Photo: ANOUK MASSON KRANTZ

SAN FELIPE, 2016

SAN FELIPE, 2016

Photo: ANOUK MASSON KRANTZ

SERENE, 2011

SERENE, 2011

Photo: ANOUK MASSON KRANTZ

UNTITLED, 2011

UNTITLED, 2011

Photo: ANOUK MASSON KRANTZ

RUCKUS, 2017

RUCKUS, 2017

Photo: ANOUK MASSON KRANTZ

WILLOW, 2016

WILLOW, 2016

Photo: ANOUK MASSON KRANTZ

UNTITLED, 2014
 

UNTITLED, 2014

 

Photo: ANOUK MASSON KRANTZ


CJ Lotz Diego is Garden & Gun’s senior editor. A staffer since 2013, she wrote G&G’s bestselling Bless Your Heart trivia game, edits the Due South travel section, and covers gardens, books, and art. Originally from Eureka, Missouri, she graduated from Indiana University and now lives in Charleston, South Carolina, where she tends a downtown pocket garden with her florist husband, Max.