In conversations with
Black photographers

 

We invite Black photographers of all genres, ages and genders to share their thoughts, experiences and work in our ongoing conversation series.

Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Yanissa X

The Black gaze is relatable, humanistic, empathetic, authentic, truthful, inclusive, defiant.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Henry Danner

The Black gaze to me, means Black visual artists having the ability and ample opportunities to tell our own stories without the fear of not meeting the expectations of non-Black people.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Jeff Boxill

The Black gaze is about the experiences that exist within each and every single one us. There are stories at every single corner. And it’s those stories that allows us to have a voice; especially when so many people are voiceless, and don’t get to share those experiences.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Brandon J. St. Jean

The Black gaze shows the importance and perspective of art and influence through Black individuals. It’s unapologetic in staying true to how our culture views and interprets ourselves.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Magno Daniel

The Black gaze means an admiration of everything Black. Admiration that is not only external but also internal. Internally in regards to politics, culture, emotions, and mental illness. Overall, the Black Experience.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Zaria Love

The Black gaze means an admiration of everything Black. Admiration that is not only external but also internal. Internally in regards to politics, culture, emotions, and mental illness. Overall, the Black Experience.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Vanessa Charlot

To me, the ‘Black gaze’ is about shifting the visual power and narrative to, and through, the lens of Blackness.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Bria Woods

It’s amazing how Black creatives can be interviewed and their process documented, it inspires.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Charlene Duron

The Black gaze is an intuitive perspective laid out with the purpose of improving how the reality is staged. It matters to me since artists can, and will be able to, step into the world with all they’ve got. Inspiration and fearless story telling prevails.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Zack Grant

The Black gaze has echoes of the male gaze. I do, however, think that as a Black man it is my duty to re-appropriate how White people see us and how we see ourselves.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Kay Hickman

It’s amazing how Black creatives can be interviewed and their process documented, it inspires.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Hilina Abebe

It’s amazing how Black creatives can be interviewed and their process documented, it inspires.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Ebuka Mordi

It’s amazing how Black creatives can be interviewed and their process documented, it inspires.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Camille Fontaine

The Black gaze is not monolithic and I interpret it as two things; firstly, it describes communicating the wealth of variety and lived experiences across the global African diaspora; secondly, it expresses the beauty of life, history and the world through the diverse perspectives within the diaspora.

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Q&A Shaun Connell Q&A Shaun Connell

Michael V. Louis

The Black Gaze is about my point of view and narrative stopping traffic – it’s about Blacks recognising that we may be different shades of Black and Brown and yet, as a community feeling connected to each other as brothers and sisters.

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