Traveling through 15 countries, Kevin Connolly, who has no legs, discovered that people stare the same everywhere, but what they see may be different. In Ukraine, he was seen as a holy man; in Vienna, a beggar.
Traveling through 15 countries, Kevin Connolly, who has no legs, discovered that people stare the same everywhere, but what they see may be different. In Ukraine, he was seen as a holy man; in Vienna, a beggar.
Chris Toalson
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  • Traveling through 15 countries, Kevin Connolly, who has no legs, discovered that people stare the same everywhere, but what they see may be different. In Ukraine, he was seen as a holy man; in Vienna, a beggar.
  • The way we gawk: A man in Kluj Napoco, Romania stares at Kevin Connnolly, who shot the photo of him. Traveling through 15 countries, Kevin Connolly, who has no legs, discovered that people stare the same everywhere, but what they see may be different. In Ukraine, he was seen as a holy man; in Vienna, a beggar.
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A legless artist documents the world in 32,000 stares

Tired of gawkers, Kevin Connolly traveled by skateboard, capturing their sheer human curiosity.

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Contributor Ray Sikorsky talks about Kevin Connolly, his Backstory subject.

But the most troubling narrative for him came in Bosnia, a country still healing from its own war wounds, where Connolly was mistaken for the victim of a Serbian mortar attack.

"The stares I would get felt different than the ones I was getting elsewhere, say in Paris or London," he says. "There was a difficult time when I was trying to figure out if it was an ethical thing to take pictures of people staring at me, when I was basically capitalizing off of exposing their old troubles."

• • •

Connolly returned to Montana with 32,000 photos; he took that many photos, he says, in an attempt to show a cross-section of humanity.

He put many of the photos on his website, TheRollingExhibition.com, and he chronicled his trip in a presentation at Montana State University in October, in which he posed the question, "Is there anything wrong with looking?"

"If every single person does it on the earth reflexively – just on reflex – I wouldn't even say there's so much about it that's right or wrong, it's just something that exists, and needs to be examined a bit more closely. I wouldn't put a right or wrong judgment on staring and curiosity."

The show apparently touched an aspect of curiosity in people – 200 extra seats had to be added to augment ones placed for the expected crowd of 400, and the show was punctuated by cheers and whistles – which surprised Connolly as much as anyone.

"Being born like this and raised the way I was, it's really tough for me to even conceptualize myself as disabled. I just don't have legs. So when someone says I'm really inspirational, it's a little strange, because I just don't think that at all."

But isn't the fact that he doesn't see himself as disabled exactly why he's so inspirational?

"Yeah, and that's always the catch," he shrugs.

Connolly plans to head abroad again next summer, this time to visit South America, Africa, and more of Asia, and take a small documentary film crew along with him.

"I really have to go back out again," he says. "I am curious about the world. I want to go see it."

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