Stories
Photographers talking together
It’s a deep pleasure to have a conversation with photographers who you admire, and I’ve been fortunate to talk with these photographers so far in Loveheadhouse the Photography Podcast. I hope you enjoy these words.
Stories
Episode 7 of Loveheadhouse the Photography Podcast is my second conversation with photographer and educator Robert Lyons. Thanks for listening.
This is my second conversation with Tim Carpenter, recorded about three weeks after episode 3. There was so much more to talk about, that we did it again. We discuss everything from the challenge of the portrait to why photobooks are far from dead.
Photographer, educator, conservator, and editor Robert Lyons talks about joining Minor White’s workshop at age 15, the meditative pleasures of the darkroom, photographing the people who attend rodeos, and lots more.
Jen trail explains how she turns some of the most personal experiences into public art, why she doesn’t think in terms of narrative, and the challenges of collaborating with her 13-year old daughter.
A conversation with photographer, writer, and book publisher Tim Carpenter about everything from why he photographs in Illinois and lives in Brooklyn, to the worldview of an artist.
Ron Jude and I talk about everything from his first camera (high school) to his first show in a New York Gallery to his latest book, which was on the printing presses the day we spoke.
For the first Loveheadhouse podcast I interview Bryan Schutmaat, author of three photobooks and recent winner of a Guggenheim Fellowship. Check it out here.
It’s hard to point to a single photographer who has had more influence on modern photography than Eugène Atget. What’s fascinating is that he apparently had no such intention.
The modern women’s rights movement started when women across the country took to the streets demanding the right to vote.
Never heard of Thomas E. Askew? Don’t be surprised. Most people haven’t. But tens of thousands of people saw his photographs at the Paris Exposition (world’s fair) of 1900.