Since the dawn of photography in the early 19th century, photographers have captured images of their families, typically recording the important moments and rituals of family life for keepsake and posterity. In this new two-day online workshop, led by fine-art photographer Elinor Carucci and contemporary photographer David Hilliard, you explore the deeply personal space of family through your camera. Elinor’s emotionally rich, intimate photographs of her own family life and David’s narrative-driven, panoramic images serve as a foundation for the themes you examine together.
Many artists find that their most meaningful work stems from personal experience: the places they live, the lives they’ve built, and the people closest to them. By photographing within spaces of intimacy, you reflect on your own circumstances and create imagery that resonates with others. We all have a family.
While much of the photographic canon has centered on traditional, heteronormative depictions of family, today’s image-makers are reshaping that narrative. Blended, chosen, and queer families expand the definition of what family can look like. These evolving structures, set against the backdrop of complex social, political, and environmental times, offer new possibilities for photographic exploration.
Throughout the workshop, you explore the visual language of memoir, personal storytelling, and familial narrative. You engage with work by Elinor, David, and other artists working in this space, and reflect on how these themes connect with your own creative voice. You refine your approach through portfolio reviews and group discussions. Writing prompts and artist statements offer another way to dig deeper into your ideas.
By looking closely at your process and your perspective, you strengthen your ability to make images that are not only personal but also powerful, and you leave with greater clarity about the direction of your work and your studio practice.
All are welcome who have “family” photographs to work with and share.
Class will meet 9:00 – 4:00 pm (Mountain Time) on Saturday, November 15, and Sunday, November 16 (two online group sessions). Enrollment is limited to 12 participants.
Zoom Video Conferencing software (available for no charge from Zoom.com) will be used to facilitate the class sessions. Further details will be emailed to registrants.
Santa Fe Workshops always aims to produce a high-quality experience for our online attendees. That said, variables including regional and local internet provider speeds, traffic on Zoom's servers, and your own computing hardware can contribute to a less than ideal streaming event. While we do our best to minimize the impact of these variables, they are outside the control of Santa Fe Workshops.
View Withdrawal and Transfer Policies for online programs.
For the convenience of participants, recordings of each class session are posted privately for one month after the end of each session. Santa Fe Workshops takes the recordings down after one month to protect the intellectual property of our instructors.
Elinor Carucci is a fine art photographer whose work has been exhibited worldwide in both solo and group exhibitions. Her images have been featured in major international publications and are held in the permanent collections of institutions such as the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), The Jewish Museum, and the Brooklyn Museum.
Elinor has received numerous prestigious awards, including the ICP Infinity Award (2001), a Guggenheim Fellowship (2002), and a New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) Fellowship (2010). She has published five monographs: Closer, Diary of a Dancer, MOTHER, MIDLIFE, and most recently, The Collars of Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
She teaches in the graduate program of Photography at the School of Visual Arts and at Hunter College Art Department and is represented by Edwynn Houk Gallery.
Website: elinorcarucci.com
Instagram: @elinorcarucci
David Hilliard is a contemporary photographer known for his large-scale, narrative, multi-paneled color images rooted in personal experience. He holds an MFA from Yale and has received a Fulbright grant and a Guggenheim fellowship. His work is in the collections of the Whitney, MOCA LA, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the MFA Boston, the National Portrait Gallery, and Sir Elton John, among others.
A longtime faculty member at Yale, David now is a regular visiting professor at MassArt, Lesley University, and Harvard, and leads workshops nationwide. His photographs appear in numerous publications and editorial outlets including The New York Times, The New Yorker, and GQ, and he was the lead photographer for Coca-Cola’s global “Together Is Better” campaign. He is represented by Yancey Richardson Gallery, Jackson Fine Art, and Schoolhouse Gallery.
Website: davidhilliard.com
Instagram: @davidthelens