Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Interview: Allison V. Smith

I’ve heard Allison V. Smith’s name in the blogosphere here or there, and I finally spent some time on her blog and ordered her zine, and I am officially a huge fan. She’s seriously good. I had some questions for her, and she was kind enough to let me post our conversation here.


Copyright © Allison V. Smith

Liz: So, looking over your résumé, it seems like you had your start in journalism, and you’re now working as an editorial photographer and doing your personal projects, too. What’s your background? What’s your story? Where’d you go to school? How did you get where you are today?

Allison: I’ve known I wanted to be a photographer since I was fifteen. I’m the youngest of five and it wasn’t very easy finding my voice within my large, active family. As soon as I discovered photography, I had my own way to communicate. My tenth-grade photo teacher exposed us to Diane Arbus, Cindy Sherman, Lee Friedlander, Walker Evans. She would give us assignments specifically based on photographers—“Go shoot a Cindy Sherman portrait,” etc. I could not get enough of photography.

Frustrated with college, I took a year off and studied at the Maine Photographic Workshops in the fall and then interned at the now-defunct Dallas Times Herald in the spring. It was a very important year for my photography. It was that year that I knew I wanted to make pictures for a living. Newspaper photography seemed to be the answer. It would feed my need to photograph daily and to be published. I finished college at SMU in Dallas and immediately started working for newspapers. I worked as an intern and full-time at seven newspapers over fifteen years. It was an amazing time to be a newspaper photojournalist—experience and knowledge that I will never forget! But I knew I wanted more.

In 2004, I quit to pursue freelance photography and my own personal artwork. Today my freelance work for magazines and newspapers supports me as a fine-art photographer. I’m represented in Dallas at the Barry Whistler Gallery, known for showing contemporary Texas artists. The Dallas Museum of Art and The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, both purchased two images from my last show at the Barry Whistler Gallery in 2006.


Copyright © Allison V. Smith

L: Do you find that living in Dallas (i.e., anywhere outside New York), it’s harder or easier to get work? Does location even matter?

A: I am a half-breed. I am half-Texan, half-Maine. I hope to live both places someday. For now, Dallas is a wonderful place to live and work. I’m a laid-back Texan, and it definitely suits my personality—not to mention that the artists’ scene in Texas and especially Dallas is very supportive and a great place to be.


Copyright © Allison V. Smith

L: Do you shoot medium-format? Digital? Strictly film? Whatever works? Does that kind of stuff interest you, or is the equipment kind of ancillary? (I read an interview with Eggleston where he said he just picked up whichever camera was around when he walked out the door. Seemed really random.)

A: I shoot it all. I have digital for mostly freelance jobs. I shoot Hasselblad and Lomo and Widelux for myself. Occasionally, a client will ask me to shoot with one of my film cameras for an assignment.


Copyright © Allison V. Smith

L: I’ve been working a lot lately (in my mind, on my blog) on developing my vision (for lack of a better word), my style, my whatever you want to call it. I think this all relates to knowing what matters to me, figuring out what I want to photograph. It’s all tied together. Part of what I love about your zine is how cohesive it is. It includes a wide variety of photos, but they all hang together really well and seem to be talking the same language. Did that just happen for you, or did you work at it? Either way, how?

A: I think it is for sure something that has developed over time. I work hard at improving all the time. My ninety-six-year-old grandfather taught me that you never stop growing and evolving as a person or an artist. Part of my zine was an effort to loosen up my style, not worry so much about making the composition perfect. It has been a great exercise for me.


Copyright © Allison V. Smith


Copyright © Allison V. Smith

L: Do you feel like you get pigeonholed in a particular genre? I mean, are you known as an editorial photographer, or a fine-art photographer, or both? Do you feel like people are open to blurring boundaries? Maybe I’ve just been watching too much CNN, but I heard James Carville the other day talking about how if a politician doesn’t define himself, someone else will define him, so you need to control the message. I hate the way that sounds (Carville’s voice is ringing in my ears), but I think there’s something to be said for the fact that people do like to categorize and define each other. Is there a way to avoid that as a photographer? Or do you just say, “Fuck it,” and do what you want and screw what people think you are (or aren’t)?

A: I think about this all the time. You know people in the art world don’t quite appreciate newspaper photographers the way I think they should be respected. There are some amazing photographers out there—Damon Winter, Mona Reeder, David Leeson—all of whom I consider some of the best photographers in the country. Yet, you never see their names outside the newspaper worlds. Damon is hands down one of the finest portrait photographers there is, and besides seeing his credit in The New York Times, you never see his name. So this makes me mad and it kind of gives me the attitude of, “Fuck it.” I am just going to be who I am. I am going to continue working for clients who are wonderful to work for, who hire me for my vision rather than tell me how to shoot something. I am going to continue to shoot for myself, and I hope for more beautiful exhibits in the future. I am going to continue to make zines and postcards. I am going to continue to shoot for myself as often as I possibly can because, in the end, I love photography. I love photographers and photo books. It’s who I am, what I am.


Copyright © Allison V. Smith

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Bobby and Teddy

There has been some posting in the blogosphere today about the RFK photos by Harry Benson and the RFK funeral train photos by Paul Fusco.

I have spent the latter part of the morning in front of CNN, watching with increasing sadness the news of Ted Kennedy’s brain cancer. It doesn’t look good.

If you’re like me, and you turn to history for answers and for hope, you may want to revisit Senator Kennedy’s inspiring eulogy to his brother Robert. The following video contains a brief clip from the end. To listen to the eulogy in its entirety, click here.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Anderson and I

I dreamed last night that I was walking my dog down the street when I ran into Anderson Cooper, who was covering a Breaking News story on the next block. His phone rang. It was a Major Magazine wanting to do a cover story on him and they needed it now. He said, “Well, your reporter is right here,” and suddenly a reporter with a notebook appeared, “but we don’t have a photographer.” [Insert Underdog cartoon theme song.] I said, “Um, Anderson, I’m a photographer. I can take your picture.”

“Oh, but have you ever done editorial photography before? Do you know what you’re doing?”

“Of course, I do,” I lied. And as if I hadn’t been ballsy enough, I added, “And it’ll be a picture of Anderson Cooper like none you’ve ever seen before!”

“All right then, let’s go!” [Insert CNN Breaking News theme music.]

Anderson and I walked back to my apartment, which had magically been transformed into a supercool studio where all kinds of students were learning photography. I made one exposure, and the whole thing was apparently brilliant, because A Photo Editor featured me the next day, and I was suddenly the darling of the editorial world.

My next assignment was to shoot Julia Roberts. Anderson was my assistant.

Labels: , , , , , ,

Friday, June 15, 2007

On gimmickry

I’ve entered a photo for consideration in JPG magazine, in the category of “Family.” To check out the image (and vote for it, if you like!), click here.

I’ve been giving a lot of thought to my self-imposed routine of every day posting a photo I’ve taken that same day. Justin James Reed touched on a similar subject a few weeks ago, though he was raising the question in terms of the value (or lack thereof) of posting new work or work in progress. Justin’s blog, and the blogs of others whose work I admire (Ben Huff and Shawn Gust both come to mind), include recent photographs from ongoing projects. This sharing of work in progress seems, I think, to have a lot more value than the photo-a-day schtick I’ve been up to.

Why? Well, although posting a photo a day was a decent goal (and really the only one I had in mind when I started this blog on January 1), it’s also a bit of a gimmick. The experience of posting a photo a day becomes more important than the quality of the photographs. In fact, most of the photos I post here are not ones I’d want to use in any other context, and some of the photos have nearly caused me to cringe as I clicked the Publish Post button. The obvious follow-up is, “Why post anything you don’t like?” The answer: Some days I just don’t get a photo I like—some days I’ve been lucky to find the time to take any photo at all.

Which brings me to the questions I need to answer for myself: Have I accomplished what I set out to do at the first of the year? If so, has posting a photo a day run its course? Has my blog evolved into something other than what I thought it might be in the beginning? (Sometimes the photo-a-day thing feels, to me, a bit like CNN trying to fill those twenty-four hours. Some of what they report is relevant, but so much of it is just filler—and I often wish they would spend more time on one story instead of filling their airtime with crap because they’ve given the big stories such a cursory review.) Is it better to only talk or post when I have something to say or show—and then do that subject justice by spending the time it takes to get it right? Or is there value in forcing myself out there to shoot every day, and using the blog as the forum in which I hold myself accountable? Is it worth it to post photos I don’t like, photos without any real context or purpose? Or would I be better off posting less often, but posting photos that are part of something bigger? Are you able to discern which photos I like, which photos are part of a larger project, and which ones are just one-offs, sometimes even shots taken just because I had to find something to photograph that day? Does it even matter?

These are all questions I’m mulling. I don’t have any answers yet, but I’m open to comments or suggestions.


Copyright © 2007 Liz Kuball

Labels: , , , , , ,