Body of Work: Interview with Photographer Liora K

Bullying is showing up on social media in the form of “fat shaming,” a term used to describe biases against individuals whose body weight is considered ‘above the norm.’ It’s a disturbing trend smacking of unfair hierarchy regarding what is considered beautiful, acceptable and cool. Enough of the shame game. Agreed?

Image courtesy of Vecteezy

This past May, blogger Jes Baker of The Militant Baker unleashed a backlash of “ads” in response to Abercrombie & Fitch’s CEO’s anti-fat comments. Five days after the aforementioned “ads” ran, A&F’s U.S. sales plummeted by 17% as reported in The Huffington Post. In homage to one of the most visible anti-bullying messages in recent months, we interviewed Liora K, Jes’s collaborator and the photographer behind this now-iconic and groundbreaking campaign.

Liora K.
Photo credit: Impulse Nine Media http://impulsenine.com/

U.S: What inspired you to direct and shoot the “A&F” photo session with Jes Baker?

L.K.: Jes and I collaborate frequently on projects and portraits, and I’m always excited when she approaches me about a new idea that we can develop together.  When the comments made by Mike Jeffries resurfaced, she thought that photographing her as a non-typical “uncool” body in a shoot styled like an A&F advertisement would be a great way to respond, and I agreed!  We are both passionate about showing real and un-photoshopped bodies by putting them into a fashion spotlight as a way to empower our friends in our local and online communities.  We discussed a variety of different ways to style the shoot, and decided on keeping it simple and clean in a studio setting so that we would have privacy to take some of the more risqué shots.  We put on some upbeat music, started with a few warm up shots, and laughed and played our way through the rest of the shoot.

Jes Baker of The Militant Baker
Photo credit: Liora K Photography

U.S.: How can photographers impact positive social change?

L.K.: All artists have the power to drive positive social change across the board, but I think that portrait and fashion photographers have a very specific role to play in expanding the types of people who are represented in our every day media. I think that by choosing subjects who have body shapes of all kinds, a broad range of skin colors and ethnic backgrounds, as well as a diversity of sexual and gender orientations, photographers can seek to normalize what is currently under represented and in some cases ostracized.

“All artists have the power to drive positive social change across the board….”
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U.S.: Do you have suggestions for aspiring photographers who wish to enact positive social change?

L.K.: My advice would be to learn your passions, and then open yourself up to sharing them through your artwork. Translating your activism to artwork can be a challenge, as can placing it out in the world to see, but debate and conversation are what drives social change. Be brave and go for it!

Photo credit: Liora K Photography

“…debate and conversation are what drives social change. Be brave and go for it!”
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U.S.: What other examples of your work do you feel speak to advancing positive social change?

L.K.: I have been working on a series of Feminist Photographs for a little over a year, which seek to create discussions around social and reproductive justice for women and men.  It’s been an incredible experience, and each shoot is a little bit different, and I learn so much from each participant.

Photo credit: Liora K Photography

U.S.: What can we expect to see next from Liora K. Photography?

L.K.: Whatever next sits in front of my lens, whether it be activism, fashion, beauty, or the randomness that sometimes pops into my head!

 

More about Liora K: Her adventures in photography began when she became obsessed with learning how to manipulate her first point and shoot so that she could avoid using the flash. Ever. Today, she still loves using ambient light in her photo shoots. She learns about people, places, and objects through her lens.

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Virtue of Small: What Might CEO Piglet Say?

“To my mind the old masters are not art; their value is in their scarcity.” ~ Thomas Edison
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Image courtesy of HubSpot

Do you milk re-purpose bygone posts written when there was time to create content for your website? Cobbler with no shoes sighs. Bloggers, companies, marketers, PR experts, social media strategists and finger-on-the pulse peeps often conclude content wears the crown: dishing up data, insights and generally good information propels us to sharable status on social media platforms, provides important resources for current and would-be clients and keeps us in the industry A List.

Agreed. And Ruh Ro. What if you buy into aforementioned perks yet find it difficult to churn out blog brilliance on the regs due to Smallness?

Imagine Mr. Edison duking it out with Gates.* “Hooray!” I exclaim as the former wields a powerful upper cut. But my eyes drop as I sniff out smarminess.

Comeback kid retorts “But the broad opportunities for most companies involve supplying information or entertainment. No company is too small to participate.” Thanks for bringing attention to this Bill Gates snippet Craig Bailey.

Small. And harumph.

Wait! Consider The Te of Piglet. In a land of Big Everything, why not capitalize on the Virtue of Small. Potential includes:

  • Precision
  • Expertise
  • Tailored attention
  • Depth
In a land of Big Everything, why not capitalize on the Virtue of Small.
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Being Small allows the luxury of capitalizing on extreme pin-pointedness, far reach into a client’s objectives, experimenting under-the-radar and tremendous opportunity for growth. All this and more applies to delivering business results as well as adventures in blogging.

Image courtesy of All Free Vectors

“You haven’t the time!” exclaimed Rabbit rushing to his next appointment.
“You’re barely noticeable anyway.” said Owl on his lunch break.
“I know! Isn’t it great?” cheered Piglet.

As always, your comments are king. Please feel free to share.

*I’d pay money to watch that fight. Not very Zen, I know.

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“I Don’t Live Right”

Quote

We found this on Meanjin online and originally came across this in print in the New Yorker some many moons ago. Can’t help but choke up on that last line. There is something about communication in the purest sense of the word that just gets us every time.

 

Dear Philip Roth:

Manuscripts around here shift and wander in huge piles, like the dunes. Yours turned up today, and I apologize to you for my disorder. It hurts me more. … My reaction to your story (“Expect the Vandals”) was on the positive side of the scale, strongly. … A great idea, but palpably Idea. I have a thing about Ideas in stories. Camus’s “The Plague” was an IDEA. Good or bad? Not so hot, in my opinion. With you the Idea gains ground fast, easily. It conquers. What of Moe?

Look, try Henry Volkening at 522 Fifth Ave. My agent. A very good one, too. Best of luck. And forgive my having the mss. so long. I should have read it at once. But I don’t live right.

Yrs,

Saul Bellow

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Talk Ain’t Cheap

Aside

Authentic communication makes all the difference. Shoot from the hip, say what you mean and above all wield compassion.

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Bygones and Brilliance

Sirens are a sensitive breed. We point to things just below the surface that shimmer and shine, echoing down down down to the depth of our souls. Deep and dark is our dance. We harp on history under waves of nostalgia. Too much so. Filling our eyes and lodging lumps in our throats. Laughable to some. Downright akin to others. In honor of kinship we’ve rounded up five favorite crafts that speak the unspeakable language of memory…long-gone moments we carry, can barely find words for, though art may have a chance of conveying. Enjoy their innate and understated brilliance, the beauty and bauble and how it all feels here and now.

 

CB I Hate Perfume

Stroll Williamsburg, Brooklyn, though not the busiest block, and you’ll find the high-beamed gallery of scent-monger Christopher Brosius. The original nose behind once-undergroundish line Demeter (you remember “Dirt”) rules the roost of his own accord since opening his gallery to the public in 2004. Enter and inhale “In The Library,” limited-edition “Gingerbread,” our favorite “Old Leather,” and the note that made Demeter’s “Snow” famous buried somewhere deep in “Winter 1972.” His website is a work of art in itself.

 

D.S. & Durga

Small batches of exquisitely designed notes catapult us back to Italian citrus fields that have no notion of cars, top-hat wearing dandies, fur-toting entrepreneurs, and wintery countesses in full ballroom regalia. Sold online and internationally, and heavily Brooklyn-based. Thank Heavens.

 

Curandera NYC 

Curanderas are traditional Latin American healers who serve their communities as doctors, healers and psychiatrists. Founder Josie writes “Living and working in urban metropolises can deplete us of vitality, heart, and spirit. Curandera NYC addresses the major urban ailments of this lifestyle — monkey-mind, stress & lack of spirit.” This capsule collection of hand-crafted, plant -based folk remedies includes tinctures, essential oil blends, healing balms and unique body essentials on Etsy. We have a small vile of Shiva for dancing and Woodland stashed for escaping.

 

Nicola and the Newfoundlander

ma·ieu·tic: adj. Relating to or resembling the Socratic method of eliciting new ideas from another. To paraphrase: to give birth to new ideas. These and other re-found words affix to reclaimed wood taken from Brooklyn watertowers, Coney Island boardwalks, and pickle and wine tanks in the form of magnets. Two artists (Nicola and the Newfoundlander) craft resurrection and redesign. When hunting for that perfect piece of whatever hidden way back on the second or third shelf in the fridge, don’t chalk it up to an undignified episode of scavenging. Consider urt: a little leftover chunk of something.

 

EAT Greenpoint

Each season brings different designs in a kitchen keeping things close to home with locally-sourced, high-quality ingredients from small producers. As if the chef visits neighbor after neighbor asking “What’s good?” and brings baskets back filled with whatever is freshest and fairest that very day. Long tables and benches best serve family-style eating while pots and pans clang in an open kitchen. Their website states: Eat’s mission is to promote and preserve a handmade life. This does not just include food. All of our furniture, metal work and ceramics are made by owner Jordan Colón and other regional artisans. They sell wood-fired pottery, too.

 

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Hunger Games: Strengthening Your Business and Your Body

Steve Jobs advised keeping hunger pangs, along with foolishness, at the forefront in his 2005 Stanford Commencement speech. Idealism, entrepreneurism and risk are often identified as a trailblazer’s ingredients for success in lieu of the chef’s sage, rosemary and thyme. Set the bar high, walk your own high wire rather than someone else’s line, and get gutsy. But stay hungry? In the land of plenty, do we know what hunger feels like? And moreover, how can hunger be beneficial in a business sense as well as a physical sense?

Set the bar high, walk your own high wire rather than someone else’s line, and get gutsy.
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Photo Source: Wikimedia Commons

Consider the concept of calorie restriction (CR). The government-funded CALORIE (Comprehensive Assessment of Long-term Effects of Reducing Intake of Energy) project, which completed recruitment and two-year follow up in April 2012, embarked to “…better understand the effect of prolonged caloric restriction on aging and to test how practical and safe is a 25% calorie-restricted diet in normal-weight individuals.” Per the CALORIE project’s website, “Numerous studies have shown that chronic caloric restriction extends average life span in animals and delays age-related diseases.” According to Brian M. Delaney, president of Calorie Restriction Society International (CRSI) and co-author of “The Longevity Diet,” as interviewed by Failure Magazine says “The evidence suggests that even a slight reduction [in caloric intake] will confer some health and longevity benefits.” He adds “Everyone should try to get a good gauge of their current state of health before making any changes.”

There’s a difference between calorie restriction and malnutrition. The CR theory suggests that calorie intake should exclude foods containing empty calories, thus increasing the amount of nutrients per food compound capita, hence more bang for the bile-friendly buck.

If research shows that staying hungry extends your body’s shelf life, then what of having a perpetual case of the munchies in business? Entrepreneurs write and talk about strategies and many aim to strike the balance between peckish vs. starved. The New York Times noted our nation’s stilted celebration around economic improvements. Recent trends suggest that companies aren’t hosting hiring parades and handing out proverbial tin-foil wrapped candies in the shape of dollars and cents toward new hires in order to stay afloat. Scarcity around new hires continues and according to the same Times article, there are six million fewer jobs to go around than at the start of the 2007 recession.

Gulp.

And glee for the entrepreneurial go-getter who doesn’t mind a rumble in the tummy.

Entrepreneurs write and talk about strategies and many aim to strike the balance between peckish vs. starved.
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While tooling around a slimmed-down smörgåsbord of opportunities peppering the path toward the American Dream, listen to your belly. Every once in a while, indulge by taking on more than what you consider a normal serving. Do make sure the pile on is dense with rich experiences and leads to new inroads. No empty calories here. Fill your plate to the brim and then some. Just don’t act as if it’s your last meal.

 

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Our SXSW Eco Panel: “Educators and Innovators: Greening Future Leaders”

Thank you so much to all who voted and commented during the submission phase of our SXSW Eco panel “Educators and Innovators: Greening Future Leaders.” Public voting and comments account for a good deal of clout as to whether panels are accepted by SXSW Eco, and we wish to thank everyone who supported us during this first phase of consideration. Accepted panels will be announced in July, and we’ll be sure to keep you informed. Meantime, onward in the name of sustainability!

Image courtesy of SXSW Eco

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Have a Story About Sustainability? Let Us Know!

As contributors to publications like cleanplates.com (view our articles around sustainable businesses here), we’re canvassing for stories about sustainability. Do you own or know of a business dedicated to advancing their community and consumers through sustainable business practices? If so, leave a comment below and we’ll keep you posted!

Image courtesy of Satur Farms

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