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B&H Photography Podcast

Picturing World Cultures: Tailyr Irvine - Native America

B&H Photography Podcast

Jill Waterman

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

4.6 • 2K Ratings

🗓️ 8 August 2024

⏱️ 69 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

How would you feel if all the coverage you saw about your culture was a superficial view from the outside, rather than a narrative steeped in details of lived experience?

Above photograph © Tailyr Irvine

This is the motivating force that led today’s guest to pick up a camera, enter the newsroom, and cultivate an insider’s perspective on contemporary Native American life, to expand the scope and enhance the accuracy of stories being told.

From exploring quiet moments at the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation during the Dakota Access Pipeline protests to a revealing photo project on Blood Quantum, you’ll gain fresh insight into the traumatic history and complex issues affecting Native American people today.

Make sure and stay to the end for details about valuable resources like the Indigenous Photograph database and Illuminative’s Guide to Native Representation, as well as to learn about Tailyr’s ongoing work with businesses and organizations, to foster native representation in their projects.

All told, you’ll walk away with a new appreciation for the idea that “Learning your culture is a privilege, and it's not a privilege that everyone gets.”

For more information on our guest and the gear she uses, click here.

If you haven’t already listened, check out all the episodes of our Picturing World Cultures podcast series here.

Episode Timeline:

2:04: Tailyr’s early documentation at Standing Rock, and the value of her insider perspective as a Native journalist.

8:19: Distinctions between stereotypical views and a more authentic and diverse representation of Native culture.

12:42: Tailyr’s Reservation Mathematics project and the controversial issue of blood quantum.

21:05: The role of reservations as a center for Native culture and history, and the recent push to revitalize Native traditions.

24:11: The dark history of Native boarding schools and Tailyr’s work in telling stories about past abuses.

29:25: The public response to Tailyr’s Reservation Mathematics story and the challenges to changing this system.

32:30: Episode Break

34:25: Tailyr Irvine’s go-to gear and photojournalistic techniques.

38:21: Documenting tribal powwows to feature individual style rather than reinforce Native stereotypes.

42:56: Rules of etiquette at a powwow, the importance of consent, and questions of picture use.

47:17: Tailyr’s first assignment on the Blackfeet Boxing Club and an ESPN editor’s help to overcome economic barriers to entry.

54:28: Tailyr’s consulting work and building partnerships with businesses and organizations to foster native representation in projects.

1:04:06: Tailyr Irvine answers our PWC Visual Questionnaire.

Guest Bio: Tailyr Irvine is a Salish and Kootenai photographer and journalist born and raised on the Flathead Indian Reservation in western Montana. Her work focuses on providing in-depth representations of the lives and complex issues within the diverse communities that make up Native America.

Tailyr is also a co-founder of Indigenous Photograph, a global database dedicated to support the media industry in hiring more Indigenous photographers to tell the stories of their communities and to reflect on how we tell these stories. She is a National Geographic Explorer and frequently contributes to the New York Times and other national outlets.

Stay Connected:

Tailyr Irvine Website: https://www.tailyrirvine.com/

Tailyr Irvine Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/TailyrIrvine/

Tailyr Irvine Twitter: https://x.com/tailyrirvine

Tailyr Irvine Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TailyrIrvine/

Tailyr Irvine on National Geographic: https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/storytelling-through-photography-tailyr-irvine/

Tailyr Irvine’s Blackfeet Boxing Story: https://indigenousfutures.illuminatives.org/ending-violence/tailyr-irvine

Illuminative’s Guide to Native Representation for Entertainment Industry Professionals: https://illuminative.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/IllumiNative_industry-guide_June-2022.pdf

Native American Journalists Association Website: https://najanewsroom.com/

Tailyr Irvine’s Vital Impacts Grant: https://vitalimpacts.org/pages/grant-winner-2023-tailyr-irvine

Indigenous Photograph Website: https://indigenousphotograph.com/

Senior Creative Producer & Host: Jill Waterman
Senior Technical Producer: Mike Weinstein
Executive Producer: Richard Stevens
Theme Music: Gabriel Richards

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You're listening to the B&H Photography Podcast. I'm Jill Waterman, the show's creative

0:07.8

producer. I'm also host of our new monthly series,

0:13.4

Picturing World Cultures.

0:15.4

How would you feel if all the coverage you saw of your culture

0:20.3

was a superficial view from the outside rather than a narrative steeped in details of lived experience.

0:27.0

This is the motivating force that led today's guest to pick up a camera, enter the newsroom, and cultivate an insider's perspective on contemporary

0:36.0

Native American life.

0:38.2

From exploring quiet moments at the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation during the Dakota Access Pipeline protests to a revealing

0:45.6

project on measuring blood quantum, we gain insight into the painful history and complex issues

0:52.3

affecting Native American people, reinforcing history and

0:55.0

it's not a private American people.

0:54.0

Reinforcing the observation that learning your culture is a privilege

0:58.0

and it's not a privilege that everyone gets.

1:12.0

My guide in this episode is Taylor Irvine, a Salish and Putney photographer and journalist, born and raised on the Flathead Indian Reservation in western

1:16.1

Montana.

1:19.3

Her work focuses on providing in-depth representations on the lives and complex issues within the diverse communities that make up Native America.

1:31.0

Taylor is also a co-founder of Indigenous Photograph, a global database dedicated to

1:37.1

support the media industry in hiring more indigenous photographers to tell the stories of their communities and to reflect on how

1:46.0

we tell these stories.

1:48.9

She is a National Geographic Explorer and frequently contributes to the New York Times and other national

1:55.2

outlets. Taylor Irvine, welcome to the show.

2:01.3

Thanks for having me.

...

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