Anderson Scott a partner at Fisher & Phillips in Atlanta is a photographer whose work has been covered by the Wall Street Journal, CNN, Huffington Post, Wired, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the High Museum of Atlanta and Yale University Gallery. Anderson became interested in photography as a teenager and received his Masters of Fine Arts from Yale University. As a starving artist, Anderson saw the light and went to Emory for his law degree. His process for taking on a project is taking random photographs of a particular subject that engages you to take more pictures, which turns into a project. He has completed a couple of large photo projects over the years. His first photo book entitled "Whistling Dixie" covered the neo-Confederate movement. That book was published by Columbia College Chicago Press. Anderson recently finished a project that he hopes to turn into a book. Using his legal connections he was allowed by the U.S. Marshal Service to photograph the abandoned compound of the Nuwaubians, a black separatist cult in Putnam County. Anderson has been actively photographing for more than 30 years. The underlying commonality in the images shown here is his keen power of observation. He can pick up on the slightest molecule of irony or humor and capture it with his camera. By that same token, he has a way of transforming the ordinary into the unexpected.