
If You’re Waiting for a Sign, Here It Is
The photos in Jessica Ingram’s series If You’re Waiting for a Sign, Here It Is have a cozy, colorful, rainy day feeling of home about them. We asked Ingram about how she documents her family life in Tennessee and Alabama whilst working out of New York and San Francisco.
It looks like all of these photos were shot in the same day. How long have you been working on this series?
‘It’s interesting that they look like they were shot on the same day. I started this series in some form in 1999, though I have been photographing my family since I was a kid with a Kodak 110 camera. In 1999, though, I moved back home after college and started looking more, and thinking about focusing on my family more. I love the images from 1999-2001 — I was shooting everything while I was with my family. In 2001, though, I moved to San Francisco for grad school and kept trying to make work there, and wasn’t happy with the work, so I started shooting for long periods at home, and then going back to SF to print and think about it, which was a new and wonderful experience. Before I had always lived where I was working, and the separation of making work one place and dealing with it in another was nice. So I worked on it in a very focused way from 2001-2003 in grad school, and then continued after for a couple of years, and honestly, I still work on it. I just finished some portraits on my great aunts and uncle that I will add to it. It doesn’t feel finished. I’m still learning a lot about my family, and it’s a wonderful, and difficult, but ultimately worthwhile experience’.
How did this series come about?
‘It’s hard to pinpoint exactly how and why I started this series. I really have been photographing my family for as long as I have been taking photographs. In college, I took some pictures of my family over the Christmas holiday, and I clearly remember feeling, after printing the work prints, that I had taken photographs that actually communicated something-they expressed how I was feeling. And at that moment, I realized that photographs can have power, that they can say something. It was big moment for me. I also know that I use photography and the experiences I have with people through photographing them, as a way to ask questions, and to gain entry. This is true of photographing my family as well. I wanted to really look at them, and understand my relationship to them, and ask questions’.
Where do you find you do your best work?
‘I have done projects in other cities, in New York, and I’ve done a couple of projects in San Francisco, that I am just wrapping up, and I love them. I do feel pulled back to the Southeast U.S., and to where I’m from-very often. When I have project ideas, they are almost always are based in the Southeast, and usually in Tennessee and Alabama. I live and work in New York now, but am back home a lot to make work. I’m typing this at my mom’s kitchen table in Nashville, TN’.



Also by ALISON ZAVOS

Paris-based Amelie Lombard is an advertising photographer specializing in food and still life. These photos are from the series, Aphrodisiaques. Read more

These amazing photos of coiled snakes are the work of Parisian photographer Guido Mocafico, whose work has appeared in Numèro, Paris Vogue, Big, The Face, and Wallpaper, amongst other publications. Read more

Bieke Depoorter’s Oe Menia series
Bieke Depoorter’s photo series, Oe Menia, won the Magnum Expression Award and the Photo Academy Award for GUP magazine. Of the work, she says: ‘For three periods of one month, I have let the Trans-Siberian train guide me alongside forgotten villages, from living room to living room. Some Russian words scribbled on a little piece of paper allowed me to be welcomed and absorbed in the warm chaos of a family. Accidental encounters led me to the places where I could sleep. The living room, the epicentre of their life, establishes an intimate contact between the Russian inhabitants. This way, I experienced transient, but very powerful, shared moments. We communicated without words. We understood each other somehow’. Read more
YOU'RE SAYING (0)
No comments yet.
HAVE YOUR SAY
Anke Weckmann was born in Hannover and moved to London in 2001. Apart from drawing, her favourite things in the world are ‘black ink, Harriet the Spy, small birds, stripey socks, sketchbooks, elderflower cordial, spring and potatoes’.
New York-based Japanese artist Shusaku Arakawa designed this small apartment block in 2005 in the Tokyo suburb of Mitaka in conjunction with his poet partner, Madeline Gins. According to the SushiLog: ‘Painted in eye-catching blue, pink, red, yellow and other bright colors, the building resembles the indoor playgrounds that attract toddlers at fast-food restaurants. Inside, each apartment features a dining room with a grainy, surfaced floor that slopes erratically, a sunken kitchen and a study with a concave floor. Electric switches are located in unexpected places on the walls so you have to feel around for the right one. A glass door to the veranda is so small you have to bend to crawl out’. Read more
Threads or Dead is a new Australian-based online clothing store, based in Perth, and selling streetwear and contemporary fashion for both guys and girls. Says site founder Justin Greenwood: ‘As well as stocking some of the more well known brands, we also import a lot of labels exclusively from America, and produce a small range of our own clothing. We want to sell clothing that is unique and often has a story behind it. We don’t want to sell clothing that is available in your average High Street store’. Read more
Mercedes Helnwein’s pencil portraits are hyper-realistic and expressive at the same time. She stays apparently faithful to her subjects, but utilizes poses and lighting to obtain dramatic and expressive images. Read more
Marton Schoeller’s new book of portraits aims to highlight the contrast between the extreme physiques of female bodybuilders and the vulnerability expressed through their eyes and nuanced facial expressions. Read more
God save the Queen. Oh, and Johnny Rotten, Sid Vicious, Steve Jones and Paul Cook too. Read more
NASA has released some pretty amazing audio recordings of sounds from the moons of Saturn. The weirdest thing about them is that they actually sound like Theremin warbles and echoey whooshy sounds from ‘50s movies about space.
WE'RE POSTING / SOME OF THE BEST

Creative advertising packaging
Despite the intentions of many, it’s not so often that advertising — as an industry — truly thinks outside the box. Yet, when executed well, clever eye-catching advertising actually works. It does. As these examples will attest to. Read more

Hong Kong-based illustrator Man-Tsun draws dark and beautiful painterly images that look like they are straight off a high-end Japanese animated film. Read more

Wheeeeee! This game is so freaking fun! You move your cursor over each dot to make them split into four smaller dots ad infinitum.

Karen Caldicott’s clay head models
British born, New York-based model maker Karen Caldicott has been making clay heads for all major US publications over the last decade. Read more

Our celebrity-saturated culture makes many of us irrationally hateful of the faces we see on our TV screens and magazine pages. Good thing there’s Celebrity PunchOut to let off some of that steam.
Thanks to Sony Australia, four Lost At E Minor readers will win personal audio prizes, including the new 8GB Walkman S series video MP3 player and the MDRXB500 Extra Bass headphones. Read more
As a special offer to our readers, the very cool Illiterate tee — designed by WeMe Creative, a group based in Hong Kong and Sydney — is now available just $30 through the Lost At E Minor online store.
DISCOVER MORE
SO...
SEARCH: Can't find what you're looking for? Do a search..
IS IT GOOD FOR YOU TOO?
We hope you're enjoying your time on Lost At E Minor, but it’s not over yet. Got something to share? Tell us about it and we'll look to publish it. If you want to have your work featured on the site, we'd love to hear from you. Pssst, we also have an online store stocking some of the goodies we feature on the site.
If you're a media agency and want to use this platform to connect with our readership, then drop us a line and tell us about it. Oh yeah, and we do digital consulting for cool brands that want to reach the sort of demographic that visits this site.












