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It’s been a bit of a tightrope walk raising two girls these last 23 years. Like many parents, I am particularly sensitive to the pressure my girls are subjected to in the media. Every day, young girls are exposed to images of women “perfected” with the help of technology. Advances in Photoshop regularly facilitate the elongation and general distortion of what is natural. This unrealistic form is consistently represented across almost all of media, with blemish-free, wrinkle-free, and even pore-free skin. It’s hard enough for growing girls to maintain a positive self-image without narrowing the scope of socially acceptable “beauty”. through manipulation.. The National Center for Biotechnology information concluded 50% of girls and young women are unhappy with the way they look. For years I photographed celebrities for magazine covers and features as well as movie posters and ads only to see the finished product highly altered from the original image.
I realize through my photography assignments how far from reality the representation of today's female status symbols has become. This was the impetus behind a change I gradually made in my technique. I began to simplify the way I chose to light and compose my portrait work. Ultimately it was an early -2000 Harper's Bazaar feature of supermodels without make up that inspired my idea to create the prime book. I wanted to depict women in a positive authentic way. I chose to shoot in black and white in a fairly tight composition without any makeup, jewelry or retouching. I wouldn’t say I had to pry the mascara from their clenched fingers but it was not always easy. Over the next 4 years I photographed over 120 women from around the country from the age of 35 to 104. Each woman was asked to write an essay about what they thought it was to be in their prime. What followed was an facinating collection of stories celebrating personal milestones and professional achievements. The women’s essays are filled with the challenges life has thrown them and the choices they have made. All of the women who’ve participated in the book seemed to share an independent spirit that inspired their rejection of conventional definitions of womanhood while challenging accepted notions about aging. My hope was that readers would see the names, look into the faces, and hear in their own words details of the journey that has shaped these extraordinary women.
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