For the past five years, Brooklyn-based photographer
Jonathon Kambouris has been working on The Last Meals Project, a photography series that pairs
photos of death row inmates with the items that they requested as their last
meal before execution. It's a dark, but somehow really interesting thing to
scroll through.
Every prisoner waiting to be executed is granted a last
meal. Prisoners waiting to die choose their last meal for different reasons.
Some choose from past memories, while others feast on what they crave at the
moment. Such fascinating details surrounding the final hours before being put
to death are a matter of public record and are the inspiration for this series
of photographs. Justice may not always be served because the innocent can be
proved guilty and the guilty can be proved innocent. Choosing the last meal is
a significant ritual because the accuracy and validity of this choice is the
only answer one can ultimately accept. This series visually documents the face
and last meal of a convicted killer and is without question, honest and true.
This will be an on going project as executions continue to take place in the
United States. The core of the issue lies not on the emotionally loaded (for or
against) arguments, but to question, how is society really served by the death
penalty?




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