Keri Pickett

Keri Pickett
Born 1959
Charleston, SC, USA
Occupation Photographer, Filmmaker

Keri Pickett (born in 1959, Charleston, S.C.) is an award-winning American photographer, author and filmmaker whose work explores love, family and community.[1] Pickett’s work "pulls subjects from the edges of public awareness to the center of the frame".[1] Pickett was first exposed to photography as a child through her figure-skater/photographer uncle Roy Blakey and years later, as an adult, she made a film about his life.[2] Pickett discovered her own love of photography in college and graduated with a B.A. degree in photography from Moorhead State University in Minnesota with minors in Art History and Women's Studies.[3] After graduation in 1983, Pickett moved in with her photographer uncle Roy Blakey in New York for a short time while starting an internship under the direction of American photographer Fred W. McDarrah at Village Voice.[4] In 1987, after Pickett was diagnosed with Burkett's lymphoma, a rare cancer characterized by the rapid growth of tumors in the body, she left New York and returned to her home in Minnesota to begin chemotherapy.[5] During the two years of Pickett’s treatment, she concentrated on her photographic work: Kids Coping with Life-Threatening Illness. Where once she had thought she was too young to die, Pickett's paradigm shifted as she photographed and became friends with children in the hospital who were dying of cancer. Pickett says, "When I was on chemotherapy I was so upbeat and positive that this started coming out in my pictures. I was a positive example to people. I started taking photos of kids with life-threatening illnesses, and my work switched....I starting putting more of myself into the work."[1]

Book Author

In 1995, Pickett published "Love in the 90s. B.B. and Jo, The Story of a Lifelong Love, A Granddaughter's Portrait", black-and-white photographs of her grandparents that she created when they were in their 90s, interwoven with the love and courtship letters they wrote to each other beginning in 1928, which won the American Photography Book Award for 1995.[6] Photographs of her grandparents have appeared in Life, German and German Geo and the Village Voice (cover).

In 2000, Keri Pickett’s Lambda Literary Award-winning book Faeries, published by Aperture Books with a forward by James Broughton, records the life and personality of gay men who self-identify as Radical Faeries and gather every summer off-the-grid in a celebration of identity. Begun in 1994, the project was shot over six years at an annual ten-day meeting in the northern Minnesota sanctuary called Kawashaway.[7] Pickett says that she is "someone who honors and celebrates the unique mix of masculine and feminine in everybody".[8]

Pickett's third book published in 2004, "Saving Body & Soul: The Mission of Mary Jo Copeland" uses her photography paired with essays and writings by Margaret Nelson to illuminate the story of Mary Jo Copeland, a housewife and mother of twelve who has overcome remarkable odds in her quest to serve the poor and homeless.[9]

Photo Projects

Films

In 2013, Pickett's first feature-length documentary film "The Fabulous Ice Age" premiered as an official selection of the 2013 Minneapolis/ St. Paul International Film Festival, where it was runner up for ‘MN Made’ audience favorite and was selected for inclusion in the Minneapolis/ St. Paul International Film Festival Best of Fest.[12] "The Fabulous Ice Age" is a documentary about the history of theatrical figure skating highlighting entertainment legends such as Sonja Henie and Gloria Nord, featuring Pickett's uncle Roy Blakey - a former ice-skater, turned photographer. Roy Blakey has the largest collection of theatrical ice-skating memorabilia in the world, housed at The IceStage Archive in Minneapolis.[13]The New York Times featured The Fabulous Ice Age in January 2014 on the front page of the arts section and the film is now being distributed by Netflix and is listed on IMDb.[14]

Quotes About Keri Pickett

"She's a really truly concerned photographer and I think she does it out of her heart rather than the necessity to make money. And that makes a big difference.", says American photographer Fred W. McDarrah of Village Voice Newspaper of Pickett.[3]

Mary Ellen Mark, American photojournalist says "Keri Pickett's deeply moving photographs are a passionate statement of her devotion... It is rare these days to see images portrayed with such honesty."[15]

Michael Fallon, writer for the Minneapolis City Pages says "Pickett's photographs in general are almost a kind of performance art--a ritual act of conjuring up the greater truth that lies in wait like a serpent beneath the surface. Her artistic success comes perhaps from her connection to the interior lives of her subjects, or the absolute strength of her will. In the end, Pickett puts much more of herself into her photos than a viewer is likely to realize."[1]

Awards & Fellowships

Book Contributions

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Fallon, Michael (June 7, 2000). "Open Shutters". City Pages (Voice Media Group). Retrieved October 27, 2015.
  2. "The Fabulous Ice Age (Keri Pickett movie)". Professional Skaters Association. 2012-10-01. Retrieved 2013-06-11.
  3. 1 2 Paine, Sylvia (1989). "Keri Pickett Survives The Odds". Photo District News.
  4. "Letters". The Village Voice. 2007-11-06. Retrieved 2012-05-16.
  5. Anderson, Bryan (February 1990). "When Words Aren't Needed". MPLS St. PAUL.
  6. "Letters". The Boston Globe. 1996-01-07. Retrieved 2012-05-16.
  7. "Keri Pickett". MoCP. Retrieved 2012-05-16.
  8. Abbe, Mary (June 23, 2000). "Keri & The Faeries". Minneapolis Star Tribune.
  9. "Saving Body & Soul". Amazon.com. Retrieved 2012-06-11.
  10. "MN Original: Keri Pickett". MN Original. Retrieved 2012-05-16.
  11. "I'm Not Your Indian Anymore: The AIM in Photos". indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com. Retrieved 2013-06-11.
  12. "'The Fabulous Ice Age' chosen best of MSP film fest". Pioneer Press. Retrieved 2013-06-11.
  13. "Fabulous Ice Age' celebrates history of ice shows'". Minnesota Public Radio. Retrieved 2013-06-11.
  14. "The Glories of Ice Shows Recalled, at Dance on Camera". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-03-28.
  15. 1 2 3 4 "Author: Keri Pickett". Alibris. Retrieved 2012-05-16.

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, October 28, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.