Tag Archives: Richard Durrah Photographer

A Day and A Life or Richard Durrah the Artist!



Richard Durrah never believed a camera was just a tool. To him, it was proof—evidence that moments mattered, that people mattered, that history was always unfolding whether anyone noticed or not. His motto, simple and unwavering, followed him everywhere: Image is everything.

Long before the gallery walls, before the weddings and magazine spreads, before the quiet recognition of being one of Cleveland’s most trusted visual storytellers, Richard learned discipline in the United States Navy. For six years, he traveled far from home—Hong Kong, the Philippines—places alive with color, movement, and contrast. Those early experiences shaped his eye. They taught him that every face carries a story, every street holds a rhythm, and every fleeting second has meaning if you are paying attention.

When he returned to Cleveland, he carried more than memories—he carried purpose.

He studied science at Cuyahoga Community College, grounding himself in structure and precision, but his real calling unfolded behind the lens. Working as an audiovisual technician at Cleveland State University and Tri-C, he sharpened both technical skill and creative instinct. Eventually, the camera stopped being part of the job and became the center of it.

Over time, Richard Durrah became a name people trusted with their most important moments.

Two hundred weddings. Two hundred promises sealed in laughter, tears, and quiet glances no one else noticed. He captured not just ceremonies, but the invisible threads between people—the way a father holds his daughter’s hand a second longer before letting go, the way two people look at each other when the room fades away.

His work expanded beyond weddings into high-end studio photography, product work for a major Scandinavian furniture company, and carefully crafted food photography for restaurants where presentation mattered as much as taste. His images didn’t just sell products—they elevated them.

But Richard was never interested in staying in one lane.

His lifestyle photography brought him face-to-face with influential figures, including President Barack Obama and Dr. George Fraser of Power Networking. Yet he approached each subject the same way: not as a celebrity, but as a human being. Because to Richard, status didn’t define a person—story did.

Back home in Cleveland, his lens became part of the city’s cultural heartbeat. He photographed the energy of the 2016 NBA Championship as LeBron James and the Cavaliers made history. He documented the intensity and complexity of the Republican National Convention when it came to Cleveland. He captured the legacy of Karamu House, one of the nation’s oldest African American theaters, preserving its spirit for future generations.

Artists recognized artists, and Richard found himself photographing creative giants like international abstract painter Bruce Conforti and Cleveland’s own Horace Glenn Reese. His work even graced the pages of Architectural Digest, a testament to his ability to translate space, light, and design into something unforgettable.

For a time, he lived in the historic Tower Press Building—a place where creativity echoed through the halls, where artists pushed boundaries and inspired each other daily. It was more than a residence; it was a chapter in a life devoted to creation.

And still, through all of it, Richard never stopped giving back.

He taught at Cleveland State University, the Ohio Media School, and Cuyahoga Community College, sharing not just technical knowledge but perspective. He reminded students that photography isn’t about the camera—it’s about intention. About seeing people clearly. About telling the truth.

Because truth mattered to him.

So did community.

Richard Durrah is more than a photographer. He is a community activist, a listener, a believer in the power of showing up. He loves jazz—the improvisation, the honesty, the way it mirrors life itself. He loves his family, grounding himself in what matters most. And when he needs a moment to reset, you can find him with a cup of Unbar coffee, repeating a quiet philosophy: Think better. Feel better. Be better.

His story is not just about success. It is about consistency, service, and vision.

And his message to the community is as clear as the images he creates:

Keep hope alive. Keep voting alive. Your voice matters, even when it feels small. Especially then. We are all in this together—not in words, but in action, in accountability, in how we show up for one another every single day.

Because just like a photograph, a community is built frame by frame.

And every frame counts.