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Documenting Denver in the ‘80s and ‘90s

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FOR THE RECORD

FOR THE RECORD

BY BRUCE GOLDBERG SPECIAL TO COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA

He’s been legally blind since the 1990s.

Weinberg uses the latest technology to make the most of the little vision he has remaining to take photos, to get around on his own and to help other people learn how to live with blindness.

“ e World in Denver: e Photography of Robert Weinberg” exhibit opened Jan. 20 and will be on display for one year in the second- oor mezzanine at History Colorado. It features eight photos from his decades of photography.

“It’s kind of unbelievable,” Weinberg said. “Not only that it’s showing my work, but for a whole year.”

In a History Colorado rst, each exhibit photo will be accompanied by a sign written in Braille to better serve those who are sight-impaired.

“History Colorado means a great deal,” Weinberg said. “It’s one thing to archive your work and know it has a home. But showing the works you’ve done in the past, it gives (validation) to my work.”

But Weinberg, 75, has been through tough times as the world showed less and less of itself as the blindness advanced.

“I went through hell,” he said. “I was clinically depressed. It was years before I could go through all the training (to regain some sight). I did take a long time to learn a lot of things that help me.”

And help is available out there.

A text-reading software named JAWS (Job Access With Speech) helped Weinberg become a touch typist, easing the writing process.

“Now I can write all sorts of stu , use email and read websites,” he said. “It’s the best and most expensive text-reading software. When I rst started losing my sight, a doctor

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