Thursday, March 12, 2009
Known for her work with bands and musicians such as Beck, the White Stripes, Elliot Smith, Fiona Apple, Spoon and many more, Autumn de Wilde is a renowned photographer. Her photos have been featured in Filter, The New York Times and have been used as artwork and covers for many groups’ and artists’ CDs. She gave some time to Jayplay to talk about her art, her motivations and some of her inspirations.
Why do you do this as an art? What makes you want to do this?
I didn’t really pursue it originally. It’s just something we do in our family. We take pictures of our friends and what we’re doing, like my dad had. When I started taking pictures of my friends or my friends in a band, I didn’t know when I went to a show. It was just a natural thing because it was what my dad did. It wasn’t in order to be famous or in order to have a career. So, as more and more people started liking the photos that I took I realized how often I felt compelled to take a photo and I slowly started taking myself seriously as a photographer. I didn’t really think that the way I liked to take pictures would be a career, which is good, because if you’re going in to photography to be rich and famous I really think those are the wrong reasons.
Do you usually have a prior relationship with the people that you’re photographing, such as Spoon or the White Stripes—how does that work?
It’s a mixed bag. I was hired to shoot the White Stripes and we got along so Jack called me to shoot The Raconteurs. The first time I met Jack [White] officially I was hired to take some pictures on the set of the “My Doorbell” video. They needed a few more publicity photos. We just really liked each other and he called me up and asked me to do the first Raconteurs record. You know he didn’t call me on my phone; I was called by someone.
With Death Cab I approached them because I really felt they should be documented because I’m a fan. That was the first time extending myself to a band I didn’t know. Beck I met before I was a photographer. He was one of the first people to really encourage me to take it seriously. Beck and I both grew up in L.A. but we didn’t meet until ’95 or ’96.
Are you planning on working with anyone new soon?
I hope so (laughs).
Do you have anybody in mind?
Long term I document Death Cab, Jenny Lewis. That doesn’t mean that I’m on her doorstep every day. But it’s someone whose career and art I’m very interested in. When there’s something important going on I try to get out there and document it. And Spoon is ongoing. I don’t like to talk about it ‘till it’s out. I don’t like to jinx it. What I did just do is the Eels’ new record. That record is coming out soon, The Decemberists as well. And I’m working on a couple of books but I don’t like to talk about them until they’re finished.
It’s obvious that you love what you do. What are some of the stresses that go along with doing this?
Paying the rent (laughs). A career as a photographer is always unstable and anyone entering into it should understand that and that’s part of what’s exciting about it. You’re never sure if what you’re doing is going to be important. It’s kind of exciting.
It’s always fun to make a mess and paint; it’s not fun to lay out the paints and put them away. You know? It’s a lot of work being a photographer and I think over the years I’ve developed a system to making my job enjoyable whether there’s a big budget or a small budget. I feel like once you’re committed to something, no matter how hard it is, it needs to be fun for the people involved and professional enough where the chaos is only creative chaos in an exciting way.
It’s really hard work preparing for something and getting all the parts you need together and the money to do it. It’s really hard keeping everything delivered in high quality on time. I’ll tell you my biggest frustration right now is keeping track and overseeing quality. People are so interested in getting things done quickly and multitasking that they’re not always double-checking that the scan is the right color of blue. And once it’s out on the Internet or printed, it’s out there forever. You can’t fix it.
And I shoot film only. I have my film scanned and there are really specific tones and colors and depths that I want. And you know when you’re doing multiple jobs it’s really hard to make sure that everything that is going out a month later after the shoot, or a week later, or two days later ‘cause it’s a rush, is going out in the highest quality that it should.
Who are some of your favorite artists, musicians, photographers, authors, anything right now?
I’m obsessed with Ang Lee because of how distinctive his style is without his style dominating over his work. I think that all of his movies are in such far reaching places that are obviously places he doesn’t live. I think what’s so amazing about his work, besides it’s all so visually stunning, is that his focus is on the relationship and the relationship according to the rules of the time period or the scenario that they’re in. And he always does that so well. He’s a big inspiration to me. I think the way he steps out of his shoes and into somebody else’s is really awe-inspiring.
New artists that I admire are, luckily, most people I photograph. I’m really drawn to artists that draw other great artists around them. That’s an exciting artist to be around: someone that’s not just the star. They crave to be inspired and they like to point out how inspiring those people are to them. I will bring up a new band that I have recently shot and love is Tiny Masters of Today. They’re teenagers, brother and sister, and their record is coming out soon and I love it. They’re songwriters and there’s something awesome about them.
Q&A: Tom Higgenson of Plain White T's
Because we have questions. Celebrities have answers.
Q & A with Rocco DeLuca
Question & Answer with John Scofield
His claims to fame almost endless—having played with jazz greats such as ...
Five questions
You vs. them
Q&A: Casey Donahew
The Granada will turn honky tonk when the Casey Donahew band comes ...
Q&A with Katie Euliss of Truckstop Honeymoon
Because we have questions. Celebrities have answers.
Q&A: Wallpaper's Ricky Reed
We have questions. Celebrities have answers.
Q & A
With Jimmy Robbins
Five questions: Brad witherspoon and Justin Springer
Two people. Five questions. See how they stack up.
G. Loves spreads the love
G. Love talks about his Lawrence and his musical influences.
Q & A: Glozell Green
Because we have questions. Celebrities have answers.
An Interview with The Wallflowers' Jakob Dylan
A guide to sonic consumption.
Q & A
With Lisa Loeb
Q&A: Sherri DuPree Bemis of Eisley
Because we have questions. Celebrities have answers.
Q&A: Caleb Hawley
We have questions, celebrities have answers.
Q&A Girl Talk
Because we have questions. Celebrities have answers.
Question & Answer
with William Elliott Whitmore
KU alumnus in Japan describes quake experience
Jason Gibson, a KU alumnus and currently teaching English in Japan, talks ...
Catch of the week: Iiham Abuanga
Our weekly peek at a fish in the KU sea.
Question & Answer
With Paul Santo of the Felt Show
Q&A: Nathan Reusch
The mind behind KC's Middle of the Map Fest.
KU graduate puts English degree to use
Professional poet discusses how she uses her degree after graduation.
Q & A
with Todd Anderson of Left on Northwood
Q & A with Common
Common raps about his acting career and musical collaborations.
A conversation with Mandy Patinkin
Q&A: Brooke Fraser
Because we have questions. Celebrities have answers.
Q & A with Ritch Price
Kansas baseball coach Ritch Price sat down with sports reporter Shawn Shroyer ...
Professor sculpts students with success
Assistant Professor of Art Matthew Burke uses his experience to inspire students ...
Q&A: The Beards of Comedy
Because we have questions. Celebrities have answers.
Interview with a shortstop
Senior shortstop Erik Morrison tells Kansan baseball writer Shawn Shroyer about his ...
Ours for now
Raising a puppy for service
Five questions
You vs. them
Hitting the open road
The best (accessible) destinations for a fall break road trip.
This remarkable American life
Ira Glass discusses the importance of lighthearted media and the art of ...
Who is James Woelfel?
Off the soccer field
Senior goalkeeper Colleen Quinn, senior midfielder/forward Emiliy Strinden, and coach Mark Francis ...
Students ask questions about faith and the ...
Panelists answered questions about Christianity in the “Ask a Christian a Question” ...
Wescoe Wit
Lol.
Q&A with Surfin' USA
Because we have questions. Celebrities have answers.
Free For All: March 26, 2007
I passed Buffalo Wild Wings as KU lost the game. I’m pretty ...
From left: Kimberlee Hinkle, Libby Johnson and Hannah ...
1 comment
Kansas Jayhawk fans hold aloft a reproduction of ...
2 comments
Erin Saupe, a Ph.D. student from St. Cloud, ...
1 comment
0 comments
Armed robbers continue to threaten.
3 comments
Comments
Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.
Sign in to comment
Or login with:
OpenID