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B&H Photography Podcast

Photography Wins! Sara Bennett and Joseph O. Holmes

B&H Photography Podcast

Jill Waterman

Podcast, Photography, Arts, Visual Arts, Bh, Photo

4.62K Ratings

🗓️ 30 January 2020

⏱️ 74 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

I don’t know if we’ve ever had two photographers with such divergent styles on the same episode. It would make little sense to even have them on together, except that their individual work is exceptional, and they are married to each other.

This week on the B&H Photography Podcast, we return to a format that has served us well in the past—speaking with a couple who both work in photography. We really hit the jackpot this time, with Joseph O. Holmes and Sara Bennett, not simply because they are interesting photographers and really nice folks but, between them, they embody a wide range of photo skills, from the technical and artistic, to the narrative and journalistic, from portraiture and art photography, to advocacy and social documentary. It’s quite an interesting situation and Holmes and Bennett, each in their own way, offer personal insight into their varied projects, and they also generously allow us a glimpse into how they work together as a couple, raising a family and supporting each other’s work.

Sara Bennett’s photography, which has been published in the New York Times, Rolling Stone, and the PBS/News Hour, grew from her years working as a lawyer, primarily on cases related to battered women and the wrongly convicted. Her portraiture of women in prison and transitioning from incarceration humanizes as it advocates and educates. Her books, Life After Life in Prison, The Bedroom Project, and Looking Inside: Portraits of Women Serving Life Sentences, are beautiful and simple documents that serve a higher purpose, and we talk with Bennett about her intentions and the long process to find the right women to photograph and the complications and joys of photographing in prison.

With Joseph Holmes, we start the conversation with New York City—and I don’t think we ever leave. Holmes could make a great image in a dark closet, but his work has such an understanding of our city and the subjects he has chosen to photograph—“Cooks on Breaks,” “Urban Wilderness,” “Streit’s Matzoh Factory,” and “Tracing the Underground,” are so New York, without ever touching the boiler plate. Blending portraiture, documentary, and street photography, Holmes’s dedication to the photo series and his technical aplomb represent the best of fine-art reportage. His work is represented by Jen Bekman Gallery, and pieces are included in the permanent collection of several museums, including the Lower East Side Tenement Museum and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Check out his photo annuals and enjoy this wonderful conversation as much as we did.

Guests: Sara Bennett and Joseph O. Holmes

Photograph © Joseph O. Holmes

For more information on the Nikon, Sigma and Fujifilm gear discussed in this episode follow this link

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You're listening to the B&H Photography Podcast.

0:04.0

For over 40 years, B&H has been the professional source for photography, video, audio, and

0:08.8

more.

0:09.8

For your favorite gear, news, and reviews, visit us at bnh.com or download the B&H app to

0:15.4

your iPhone or Android device.

0:17.6

Now here's your host, Alan Whitez.

0:19.7

Greetings and welcome to the B&H Photography Podcast.

0:22.2

I'm your host, Alan Whitez.

0:23.7

And on today's episode, we're going to be joined by photographers Sarah Bennett and Joseph

0:27.5

Holmes, who coincidentally happened to be a married couple.

0:31.2

Like our past conversations with Ben Loewy and Marvie LaCarr, and with Stephen and Betty

0:35.3

Wilkes, we like to understand how photographic work and photography itself exists within

0:40.3

a relationship and what role it has in the life of a couple.

0:43.6

In this case, we have a situation in which one member of the couple, Joe, has been a long

0:47.8

time photographer, dedicated to the craft for many years while his counterpart, Sarah,

0:53.3

is a relative newcomer, mostly using photography not as an art or even as an end in itself,

0:59.1

but as a means for advocating for awareness and change.

1:01.9

In the first half of our show, we're going to profile Sarah and Joe's individual work

1:05.9

and how they approach their photography.

1:07.9

And after a short break, we're going to dive into how photography exists between them,

1:12.3

how they have helped and learned from each other.

1:14.3

And since they're married couple, we're going to see if we can get them into a little

...

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