For more than a year, photographer Joanne Ziter has been documenting a steady ritual of civic engagement unfolding each Saturday morning in Cold Spring. From 10:30 to 11:30am, rain or shine, members of Joining Forcesโ€”a local grassroots groupโ€”gather at the intersection of Routes 9D and 301 to protest, reflect, and make themselves visible. Ziter has been there week after week, camera in hand.

A retired educator now living in Cold Spring, Ziter began photographing the group in early 2025, at the first โ€œNo Kingsโ€ rally. Since then, she has created an informal visual archive of demonstrations that have mirrored the news cycle itself: concerns about grocery prices, healthcare, Medicare, tariffs, and farmers; opposition to billionaire influence; solidarity with Canada; and responses to local and national tragedies. โ€œThe signs have reflected that over time,โ€ Ziter says. โ€œItโ€™s followed the news.โ€

Ziterโ€™s interest in photographing protests stretches back decades. In the 1990s, she studied photography in Paris with a small group of expatriates before spending more than 20 years in Brooklyn, where she worked primarily as a street photographer. She later documented demonstrations in New York City, including the Womenโ€™s March and student protests calling for stronger gun laws.

Her attraction to photographing peopleโ€”rather than landscapesโ€”has personal roots. Ziterโ€™s uncle, Bernie Kolenberg, was a photojournalist and among the first American journalists killed while covering the Vietnam War in 1965. Growing up with his photographs, including images from his โ€œFaces of Vietnamโ€ series, left a lasting impression. โ€œIโ€™ve always admired his work,โ€ she says. โ€œHeโ€™s been a very big inspiration.โ€

While protests can carry an air of confrontation, Ziter describes the mood in Cold Spring as distinctly communal. Local guidelines prohibit vulgar signage, and the weekly demonstrations often resemble a family gathering more than a march. Children blow bubbles or play on the hillside. Someone brings a trumpet from music class; others bring drums or whistles. Protesters range from the very young to those in their 90s, bundled against the weather. โ€œItโ€™s a group that is there for positive change,โ€ Ziter says. โ€œPeople show up because it feels good not to feel isolated.โ€

That sense of presenceโ€”of simply showing upโ€”runs through Ziterโ€™s photographs. Taken together, they offer a portrait of a community expressing dissent not through spectacle, but through persistence. For information about Joining Forces demonstrations, email hudsonvalleyjoiningforces@protonmail.com. Ziterโ€™s work can be found on Instagram.

Brian is the editorial director for the Chronogram Media family of publications. He lives in Kingston with his partner Lee Anne and the rapscallion mutt Clancy.

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1 Comment

  1. Thank you for this article. Please give all praise and recognition to the two women who began these protests: Carolyn Llewelyn and Alex Dubroff.

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