Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Interviewing a great photographer/artist - Lindsay Thompson!

Tell me about your background briefly.

- I was born in reading, Pennsylvania, lived there my whole life, and never moved anywhere. I am the youngest out of four, so I feel a lot of my life has been based off what they did. I got into sports because they did; I got into the same music as they did. They were definitely a big influence. I played soccer for a while, also was mostly interested in swimming and water polo. I was definitely not an artsy kid but more of a student athlete.

What made you come to an art school, and why photography?

- I always wanted to be a fashion designer, since I was in third grade or so; I was always doodling little dresses, giving them to my friends and thinking I was cool for it. After a while, I never became something to focus on, but it was my junior year when I realized I needed to actually do something progressive, so I finally took art classes, which helped me building my portfolio. I became friends with those kids in art and really got into it. I applied to four different schools, and Tyler School of Art was the only art school. I wasn’t actually allowed to go to an art school in itself, for example, if Tyler was still located in Elkins Park, I probably wouldn’t have been able to come, because I had to go somewhere connected with an actual college in order to get a broader education. It was between Temple University and Penn State. Nobody wanted me to go to Temple, but encouraged me to go to Penn State, but I ignored them and decided to go to Temple anyway. I was thinking about majoring in fibers or graphic design. Then I was sucked into the vortex of the jewelry department for a little. In jewelry, the people were great, but I realized it wasn’t really for me. I realized I wanted to major in something that involved more life experiences, rather than playing a mad scientist in a secluded studio. I wanted life experiences along with making art. At that time, I was also taking photography classes, and one graduate student in photo department, Amy Harbilas, encouraged me to stick around photo. Next semester, I had Mark Winicov for photo 2. By sophomore year, people and professors gave me a great impression and made me realize how great this department is.


What inspired you? Who are some of your favorite artists?

- I'm not really sure what inspires me. I think that's more of an unexplainable internal thing. But, I can say that I am drawn to color, light, back lighting, and experimenting. Also, I can say that being here in this environment with all these people who I see work hard everyday really pushes me and my desire to be successful. It’s not anything competitive, but more so that we are all pushing each other to our limits and it’s great. My favorite artist may be Cy Twombly. I first heard about him in high school when I had to write a research paper. I only wrote a paper on modern art, because I just did not understand nor like it very much, but, after writing a paper, it changed my mind. I learned that, in order to get an appreciation of something, I needed to really research and study them. I can’t choose one favorite photographers; there are so many. I really love Gerhard Richter, Irving Penn, and Sally Mann.

Tell me about your work!
- I started to make works with intent, outside of assignments around last spring. In Advanced Photo Workshop, everything was very abstract, full of layers, levels of lights and medias. I added paint or photograms on top of the work to push how much I could abstract it. After all, I did love the final result, but at the time, I hated the project. Each layer was like pulling teeth and I felt like I was at that mad scientist in the studio by myself; I was getting away from what I really enjoyed about photography and spending too much time in the dark. It was too secluded for my taste, but the abstraction has led to things that I enjoy working on now, painting on people. I believe working with one other person can make a big difference on how I enjoy what I'm doing. Another project I did was using light to illuminate important areas in photographs. I went outside when it was dark, kept the shutter on 30 second exposure or so and used a hand held flash to select what I wanted to brighten. This project was more of an experience along with experimentation and I had a friend with me for protection and to press the shutter, so I wasn't alone again.

What do you believe in strongly? Any ideas, philosophy, thoughts and more?
-  One thing that I truly believe in is that I have been extremely lucky in how my life has played out. Many people don’t seem to realize how fortunate they are and things are too often taken for granted. I believe that I can't continue living so fortunately while others do not get the same opportunity from the start. I also think living in North Philly has made me grow up and see real struggle, which, to be honest, has made me cynical about a lot of things, but I do not want to just forget about my ultimate desire to help. I also strongly believe, as tacky as it sounds, that there is more to life than just what we experience on this earth. There would be no point to higher thoughts, to music, art even love. There has to be a point to the emotions, relationships and feelings we make and it has to relate to something other than this very short amount of time that we are given. Finally, I believe that one shouldn’t get angry at small things, also that there is no reason to suspect the worst in people. Why waste emotion and time by being angry with someone? When you know in a matter of hours, you will forgive them and move on and forget about that tiff completely.