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jessica ingram

Photography / 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’.
jessica ingram
jessica ingram
jessica ingram

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Aaron Ruell

He may have played Kipland Ronald Dynamite (Kip) in Napoleon Dynamite, but Californian photographer Aaron Ruell is much more comfortable behind the camera. We interviewed him recently: You’re an actor, filmmaker, and photographer. Is there a continuous theme or tone in your work across these mediums? ‘I think there is a connection between my photography and what I do in film as a director. I notice a similar tone between the two. I’m not sure that I set out for consistency between the two, it just happens. I still have issues with calling myself an “actor”. I’ve only done two films, and it’s not something that I’m out there actively pursuing. Those projects just happen to find me, so I can’t say that there’s a connection there’.

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Dogs Department cable sweater

I can’t wait for it to get cold so I can dress my puppy Selma Lou in her new cable sweater from Dogs Department. Made from wool imported from Italy, it’s ultra warm and fits her like a glove. Like a kid wanting to wear their new fall clothes on the first day of school, she’s tried it on a couple of times (with hood and without hood) and has assured me she won’t gain anymore weight and that it will fit next year as well. Now, all the Brooklyn dogs are going to want to know her and sniff her butt. Good times!

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Lucas Foglia’s Re-Wilding photo series

Lucas Foglia’s Re-Wilding series is an intimate look at ‘a network of people throughout the southeastern United States who had left mainstream society to adopt wilderness or homesteading lifestyles’. We spoke to him about the project. Can you tell us what made you decide to embark on the project? ‘I grew up with my extended family on a farm in suburban Long Island. Influenced by the back-to-the-land movement of the 1960s, my parents maintained an agricultural lifestyle as malls and supermarkets developed around us. We heated with wood, grew and canned our food and bartered plants for everything from shoes to dentistry’. Read more

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We asked Melbourne-based artist Justin Williams to tell us about his work: ‘I am always interested in the way humans and animals relate to each other, and the similarities we share, as well as the major differences. This work was inspired by my girlfriend’s dog, and a photo of her as a child, joining the two together as if they both cant make decisions without the other’. Read more

Oh man, close your eyes if you will and transport yourself to a place far, far away; where disco is in, polyester is up, and everyone bows long and deep to the gravitational pull of the almighty afro. Sister Self-Doubt by The Shakes takes me there. It takes me front and centre, feeling that slippery, incidenary groove as it crunches my spine and works its way to my feet. Hmmm, the feet. It’s always in the feet. And now I’m dancing and twisting, onwards and upwards, like a manic spinning top thinking nothing of today and even less of tomorrow.

Listen to The Shakes track, Sister Self Doubt.

Can you ever really get sick of red plaid pants? Geography defying brand, Mjolk certainly doesn’t think so and looking at their Autumn/Winter ‘08 collection, it’s hard not to agree. Read more

The AirPiano is an innovative musical interface which allows the playing and controlling of software instruments simply by moving your hands in the air. Above the AirPiano is a virtual matrix of keys and faders, each assigned with MIDI messages ready to be triggered. The length of a triggered note is equivalent to the time a hand is placed on the corresponding virtual key, which is also confirmed by LED feedback.

We have a bunch of new playlists up on our sister site, My Secret Playlist, a music discovery website and weekly email publication in which we invite our favourite bands and musicians to give us the rundown on their eight favourite songs right now. Over the past few weeks, acts such as The B52s, Team Genius, Pivot, Jukebox the Ghost, Moby, Katy Perry, and the Dandy Warhols, among many others, have written about the music that inspires them. To sign-up to receive the weekly My Secret Playlist publication, just enter your email address into the website’s subscription box.

When I first moved to London and didn’t know a soul, I joined up with the British Film Institute [BFI] and started going to the talks they put on. When I went to see Gene Wilder speak, all the know-alls in the audience kept asking questions, not to find out anything, but just to show off to the room how much they knew about film making. He got annoyed. Genius boy genius.

This interview with James Lavelle gives a fascinating window into the making of the latest UNKLE opus, End Titles, Stories for Film.

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Shadows and Dust

When it comes to making an entrance, nothing says rock star quite like a pair of leather pants. If you’ve tried this look at home, you’d know that finding a flattering leather statement piece is much harder than it looks. So it’s lucky for us that leather is Melbourne label Shadows & Dust’s specialty. Designer Stephen Jones sources skins from all over the world to create butter-soft ruffled jackets, skinny trousers, vests and shorts. And what makes this label stand out from the rest is that it takes three workers an entire day to create each unisex leather garment. In a society of mass manufacture, that’s what we like to call a rarity.

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Micah P. Hinson takes the good with the bad

We said a few weeks back that Micah P. Hinson is ‘like every rustic, broken down, and pieced back together country great that’s ever been. Only hipper and slightly less sombre’. With that in mind, we spoke to him recently and asked him whether his hometown of Texas was a difficult place for a young, aspiring musician to grow up in: ‘The boredom of Abilene [Texas] helped the creativity. There wasn’t much to do to fill a person’s time, so you had to find ways of filling it. So as far as music, this was helpful. But regarding other extralegal activities, it was not so helpful. But you know, you take the good with the bad, mix it up, and see what pops out’. Read more

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Jeff Luker

Seriously, nothing beats good old 35mm film. To me photography isn’t about capturing every pore in someone’s face, or even making slick, magazine-ready images. The imperfections in film put just enough distance between the viewer and the moment that allows room for an emotional and nostalgic response. Digital photos are generally so vivid that it eliminates all the mystery of an image. Check out Jeff Luker’s photostream to see what I mean. Read more

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Andrew Hem

I’m so digging the work of Santa Monica artist Andrew Hem. Painting seems to have become relegated in the illustration world these days, so I’m pleased to see Hem rocking it in a big way. His bold brushwork, lush colors, puppet-like figures and painted type make for a body of work that really hits the painted spot.

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Scour, a new way of searching the net

Have you heard about Scour yet? If not you will. It is quickly emerging as the most serious competitor to the Google search engine, with an approach based on votes and comments from users focusing on relevance. It delivers search results from Google, Yahoo and MSN, and the best feature is that each time you search, vote or comment, you receive points which can be exchaged for VISA gift cards. Sour gives you one point for each search, two points for each vote and three points for each comment. With around 6,500 points, you will receive a $25 VISA gift card. Not bad for doing something you’re doing now anyway for free.

The Mission is part of a series of maps and images of Lauratopia, a fictional world that Brooklyn-based illustrator Laura Carmelita Bellmont has made up as a home for her imagination. The prints are archival, sized 8″ x 7″, and available for US$60. Read more

end titles

WIN

UNKLE’s new album, End Stories … Music For Film, comes in a limited edition gatefold vinyl gloss with sculptured panel embossing. We have three copies to give away to randomly selected Australian Lost At E Minor subscribers who leave a comment under this post.

WHAT YOU'RE DOING

  • Tashi is browsing the Bubble

  • Terence is going to get his drink on tonight

  • Huna is listening to Eddy Current and dancing by the oven light.

  • Carly is wearing flouro Havianas

  • Mikey is listening to The Kingsbury Manx

  • Chris is wearing Nique

  • Katy is listening to GotRadio 80s music

  • Andres Colmenares is thinking of WABI SABI

  • the world is buying Arusak´s hoodies

  • megan is thinking of representation

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