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I don't think still photography will ever die, in an ever increasing battle for eyeballs, videos will lose out as the longer more time consuming medium, a sad thing to say but I fear it's true. You created a GIF series – do you think the future of digital photography lies with this format? He was released from the hospital three days later. I made a few photographs of him while there. Still, he put on a brave face and we played video games and talked about art and football. He had lost an insane amount of weight, he was lethargic, he had really lost his spirit. He had been hospitalized for 80 days straight and could barely eat. I spent the next 36 hours with him in his hospital room. Two months later on my way from NYC to CA I stopped in Maddison and surpised Brennen in the hospital. I was by his side a lot while he was in New York and made some photographs of him where he still looks really healthy and musclar and his normal, exceedingly good-looking self.
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It flaired up in a big way recently and Brennen was hospitalized, first here in New York, and he was later airlifted to Madison, Wisconsin to be near his family. Brennen has CVID which is this crazy and rare disease that’s never quite the same patient to patient. This is a photo of my dear friend and long time muse Brennen Steines. Tell us about the story behind this shot? I recently re-gifted it to my boss, Nicola Formichetti for his birthday. The imagery is amazing and the sets and costumes are all so perfect, that would became a huge inspiration for me. Walter was a gay porn photographer in the 50s in a time when gay porn was a pretty big no-no. I hooked up with this sex-crazed 30-something guy during that whole post-breakup sexual escapade who gave me Walter Kundzicz book Champion. Mostly jocks in locker rooms and twinks in the forest. I won the “ Mapplethorpe Foundation Award” from SVA so I guess I should say him right? - Mapplethorpe. I’m also really inspired by porn. Your portfolio is pretty NSFW – what American idols of erotica in photography would you say have inspired that? I’m reading Alexis Penny’s book right now and its blowing my mind. Hari Nef, Alexis Penny, Bailey Stiles, Sam Banks and Colin Self aka the amazing queens of Chez Deep have been really major in changing the discourse around drag and queer culture in New york. Gay activism is a big part of your work – who do you think is emerging right now as one of the fore-runners for your generation in terms of gay activism in art? I had the opportunity to photograph the living legends and unknown founders of the gay rights movement in the south. I went to New Orleans too, that was pretty fun. My life is sort of dominated by that, so photographing it only felt natural. With the help of my SVA-appointed mentor Phillip Gefter I came up with the working bracket of “Queer Cognitive Dissonance” which refers to the storm in your mind that brews when two opposing views come together, as viewed through a queer lens. I’ve always been interested in contrasting dualities and this one was prominent in my life at the time. I was intrigued by the notion of being so physically close with someone, the closest you can possibly be, which is to say inside of them, while being completely emotionally distant and removed. I was no stranger to this scene but something about it this time around had me thinking critically about the act and the larger implication on the gay community.
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I had just broken up with my partner and was having a lot of anonymous sex with guys from Grindr and Craigslist. Tell us a bit about your graduate portfolio?Ī lot was happening in my life at that time and I dealt with it the best I knew how which was to obsessively photograph it. I was 15 and didn’t know any better so I started shooting for him. He messaged me on myspace and said “Hey, I like your photos, and you’re not too bad looking yourself”. I started as a “serious” photographer when I was 15, I was making portraits of my friends and putting them online, eventually I was approached by LA designer Brian Lichtenberg who stole those designs from Alex Kazemi. My mom is a sculptor and painter and my dad designs truss, I grew up going to gallery openings and foreign films, art has always been a big part of my life. Tell us a bit about your artistic background? When did you first get into photography as a serious career?īoth of my parents are artists of a sort.