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by popseeculCheck out #francoisvisser's #interview on #popseecul / #popasksyou . Beautifulposted 4 days ago
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Tag Archives: photography
FRANCOIS VISSER
pop.see.cul : Can you tell us a bit about yourself and what you do?
Francois Visser : Francois. Lives in Cape Town. Takes pictures. Often ocean bound. Likes films by Kusturica.
pop.see.cul : When did your interest in photography start?
Francois Visser : When i was in school, taking pictures of the sea, developing black & white prints. A friend later showed my an essay & book curated by John Szarkowski which changed the way I looked at photography entirely.
pop.see.cul : What inspires you?
Francois Visser : Books, films, conversations, music, paintings, new experiences, anything that fuels one’s imagination.
pop.see.cul : What is your typical day like?
Francois Visser : Always different, varied exploits, coffee, reading, venturing into nature.
pop.see.cul : Do you always carry your camera with you?
Francois Visser : I have a small contax that I keep close to me
pop.see.cul : What is your favorite art piece?
Francois Visser : Gustav Klimt, Death and Life
pop.see.cul : What would you do right now if you werent answering our interview?
Francois Visser : Writing a letter
pop.see.cul : What’s the best quote you?ve ever heard?
Francois Visser : We are what we repeatedly do – Aristotle
pop.see.cul : Tell us one thing you remember about your childhood.
Francois Visser : Getting up early watching the wind sweep white cloud dust across an empty beach, and a siamese cat named Lou
pop.see.cul : If you could meet a person- living or dead- who would it be? and what would you tell him/her?
Francois Visser : Maurice Sendak. Thank you for the wild things. They made wonderful childhood memories.
pop.see.cul : What is your favourite city and why?
Francois Visser : New York, interminable energy. I would like to visit Kathmandu.
pop.see.cul : What’s the song you can’t stop listening to nowadays?
Francois Visser : Nick Cave, red right hand
pop.see.cul : What are your plans for the future?
Francois Visser : Follow my intuition, work, collaborating with interesting people, new adventures, and hopefully a little wiser.
pop.see.cul : Our last interviewee, Samantha Casolari would like to know: Where do your ideas come from?
Francois Visser : Often personal experiences and time spent alone – a mix of invention, observation, & chance.
pop.see.cul : What would you like to ask our next guest on pop.asks.you?
Francois Visser : What are you working on at the moment?
To see more about Francois click here
HANA KNIZOVA
in PHOTOGRAPHY
Tagged Couple Exchange, Hana Knizova, IO, One, photography, Young Hollywood Leave a comment
MATTHEW TAMMARO
Pop.asks.Matthew
pop.see.cul: Can you tell us a bit about your background?
Matthew Tammaro: I am from a country town that overlooks Toronto, Canada, and just last week I moved to Los Angeles. I went to Ryerson University in Toronto for photography, and have spent most of my time there.
pop.see.cul: When did your interest in photography start?
Matthew Tammaro: I started photographing in high school, and really liked it, but continued to pursue drawing and painting. I stopped that after a short stint at another university, and realized that I’d rather be a photographer.
pop.see.cul: What inspires you?
Matthew Tammaro: I don’t know if I ever go to one or two sources for inspiration. And it’s always changing, but really it can range from so many things. I’ve just spent a week in LA now, and hadn’t been too inspired until yesterday. The light is great here, and there are so many colours that don’t exist in Toronto. So I guess there’s a novelty aspect to me being inspired. And also, nature and environment is very important to me. I also really like figurative painting. People and their emotions are huge inspirations. And of course constantly looking at what other people are doing in photography and art.
pop.see.cul: How would you define your style?
Matthew Tammaro: I don’t really know. I don’t rely on one or two techniques so it’s hard to say in terms of that, but I do know that there’s some common thread between my images, I just couldn’t narrow it down in words too easily. But it’s mostly figurative.
pop.see.cul: What do you love most about your work?
Matthew Tammaro: I love the pieces when I feel like I’ve found some sort of harmony in them. It’s not for every one, but I do feel like I’ve gotten there at times, and it can be as a portrait or landscape, or whatever really, but that’s what I love. I figure I’ll try many different things photographically throughout my life, so what I like is when I can reach a harmony in a piece. That feeling is really what it’s all about.
pop.see.cul: What do you hate most?
Matthew Tammaro:That I don’t shoot enough.
pop.see.cul: What are your plans for the future?
Matthew Tammaro: I really want to keep developing here in Los Angeles, and continue to book more clients, but also to explore more and to go more places. It all plays into my work, I think–I guess it means to keep on seeking more inspiration, and doing more with what I find. And I’d love for that to keep on getting me work, and to work with more people and magazines and clients, but also to refine my personal work.
pop.see.cul: What is your typical day like?
Matthew Tammaro: Right now, I still haven’t really adjusted to the time change, so I’ve been getting up around 6, which is great–I love that! Then coffee/shower/eat. Then getting to work, which usually means any sort of administrative stuff, and then I’ll work on photos until I can’t see straight anymore, and then I’ll make dinner and eat with my girlfriend. And lately I’ve been going for walks in the canyons here, which is so beautiful (the plants are like nothing else!). Then come home, and if I’m lucky I’ll get some reading done, but I still can’t shake this time change, so I usually pass out pretty early.
pop.see.cul: Favorite movie?
Matthew Tammaro: Right now: Le Mepris
pop.see.cul: What is the song that you can stop listening to lately?
Matthew Tammaro: I actually haven’t been listening to too much music lately, which definitely is weird. It’s been a long time since I found anything really great…
pop.see.cul: Best quote you’ve ever heard?
Matthew Tammaro: “When spring came, even the false spring, there were no problems except where to be happiest. The only thing that could spoil a day was people and if you could keep from making engagements, each day had no limits. People were always the limiters of happiness except for the very few that were as good as spring itself.” — Hemingway in A Moveable Feast
pop.see.cul: Tell us one thing you remember about your childhood.
Matthew Tammaro: This road trip that my mom took me on when we were living in Vancouver, all the way down the West Coast across the South, up to Great Lakes, and back across to Vancouver. You see so much so fast when you’re driving for such long days.
pop.see.cul: If you could meet a person- living or dead- who would it be? and what would you tell him/her?
Matthew Tammaro: I think it would be really neat to speak with Matisse. He supposedly had a very grounded idea of his art, and wasn’t as zealous as Picasso. And I would just want to spend a whole summer, photographing, conversing, and eating good food with him in the south of France.
pop.see.cul: What would you do right now if you weren’t answering our interview?
Matthew Tammaro: Making breakfast and going for a hike.
pop.see.cul: Our last interviewee, Vicki King would like to know: Out of all the work you have made which piece do you feel encapsulates you and what you are about over the rest? And why?
Matthew Tammaro: This one because it is such a great reflection on the emotional state of where it was photographed. The sun had set, but the colours are so lively and bright.
pop.see.cul: What would you like to ask our next guest on pop.asks.you?
Matthew Tammaro: If you could have one famous piece of art, which would it be?
VICKI KING
Pop.asks.Vicki

pop.see.cul : Can you tell us a bit about your background?
Vicki King: I am from the very middle of England, I always knew I wanted to escape to London at the first possible moment, so that is what I did. I completed a degree in Photography from London College of Communication in June and since then I have been freelancing as a photographer.
pop.see.cul : When did your interest in photography start?
Vicki King : I did a foundation at London College of Fashion, thinking I wanted to be a designer, I sucked so much at sewing its quite hilarious. We started to incorporate photography towards the end of the course and I felt like it came much more naturally, and I could express myself through making images much more clearly than through design.
pop.see.cul : What do you love most about your work?
Vicki King: I am very self critical, so I’d be wary to say I love anything.. Being dissatisfied makes you progress.. But I do like how intuitive it is.
pop.see.cul : What do you hate most?
Vicki King: How still it can be.
pop.see.cul : What inspires you?
Vicki King: The sun, London at night, people, sex, certain colour pallets, songs, I get healthily obsessed with things.
pop.see.cul : What are your plans for the future?
Vicki King: To grow, to keep making work and exciting myself.
pop.see.cul : What is your typical day like?
Vicki King: Wake up, either do some researching, emailing, planning for shoots, or some editing, meet a friend for lunch or drinks in the evening. I also work in a studio, so if I’m there I get up at 6am or something silly like that.
pop.see.cul : Favorite movie?
Vicki King: Hm, I have lots for different reasons, but maybe Melancholia because it’s so weird and beautiful
pop.see.cul : What is the song that you can’t stop listening to lately?
Vicki King: Fourtet’s mix of Skin by Grimes, its addictive
pop.see.cul : Best quote you’ve ever heard?
Vicki King: Look at everything as though you were seeing it either for the first or last time. -Betty Smith
pop.see.cul : Tell us one thing you remember about your childhood.
Vicki King: Most of my memories are of my sister and I, we had great imaginations and grew up on a street where everyone had massive beautiful gardens. We used to climb over our fence and run into the neighbouring gardens, at the time they seemed like these huge forbidden forests and jungles, we got in a lot of trouble for that.
pop.see.cul : If you could meet a person- living or dead- who would it be? and what would you tell him/her ?
Vicki King: I would love to meet PJ Harvey, I’d ask her if we could make some art together.
pop.see.cul : What would you do right now if you weren’t answering our interview?
Vicki King: Venturing out into the snow, you guys are saving me.
pop.see.cul : Our last interviewee, Rebekah Campbell would like to know: If you weren’t an artist, what would you be?
Vicki King: Probably very miserable.
pop.see.cul : What would you like to ask our next guest on pop.asks.you?
Vicki King : Out of all the work you have made which piece do you feel encapsulates you and what you are about over the rest? And why?

in POP.ASKS.YOU
Tagged interview, photographer, photography, Vicki King 1 Comment
REBEKAH CAMPBELL
Pop.asks.Rebekah
pop.see.cul : Can you tell us a bit about your background?
Rebekah Campbell : I grew up in a tiny city in Oklahoma and traveled around my highschool year in Asia and now I’m attending the Savannah College of Art and Design in Georgia, where the south collides with creative minds every second. Ever since I can recall, I’ve been interested in art and creating things from my imagination – which lead me to where I am today.
pop.see.cul : When did your interest in photography start?
Rebekah Campbell : Around the age of 15 I started playing with my father’s digital camera, and I really began to conceptualize ideas using it. Then I found people on the internet who really began to inspire me, and I was hooked.
pop.see.cul : Has there been a particular project you found to be the highlight of your career so far?
Rebekah Campbell : It’s hard for me to answer this, because most of the projects I do have something personal connected to them, but I think my couple’s project (we are this) using 35mm black and white film had an influence on where my work is today. It seemed like other people enjoyed it as well.
pop.see.cul : Where do you usually take your inspiration from?
Rebekah Campbell : Usually my everyday life is a constant muse, exploring other artist’s work, music I listen to, and people I’m close to; they tend to inspire me a lot more than they know.
pop.see.cul : Can you tell us about your project ‘we are this’ ?
Rebekah Campbell : I photographed ten different couples in the Savannah area, I didn’t personally know all of them until meeting them to take pictures, but they all were such sweethearts allowing me to delve into something so personal. I have always perceived love to be either fleeting or altruistic. As a person who has yet to find it, this project studies the nature of identities and psychological behavior in these relationships. I aspired to study how these individuals relate to each other. Photographing the following couples has enabled me to learn more about them, while, discovering for myself, the engaging acts of something fascinating, and in turn, permitting myself consider this poignant facet of life that becomes for many the light at the end of the road. You can see a few more images here .
pop.see.cul : What are your plans for the future?
Rebekah Campbell : Finish working towards my BFA, hopefully move to a city where I can have a job, and keep photographing things I love and never fall into a rut of not making work. I never want to stop doing personal work.
pop.see.cul : What is your typical day like?
Rebekah Campbell : Wake up, check my email and browse some sites, make breakfast and drink coffee, get ready for my day, either have a class for school or bike around the city/see some friends, try to do something productive towards my art, eat something in between tasks, and end my day back at home.
pop.see.cul : Favorite movie?
Rebekah Campbell : I’ve always hated this question, I never can say just one. Here are a few favorites – Un femme est un femme, An Education, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and Bright Star is lovely.
pop.see.cul : What is the song that you can’t stop listening to lately?
Rebekah Campbell : Dark Horse by Other Lives on their Tamer Animals album.
pop.see.cul : Best quote you’ve ever heard?
Rebekah Campbell : I’m the type of person who devours quotes 24/7 so I don’t have one favorite, but here’s a really helpful one for anyone interested in the arts. ”Nothing is original. Steal from anywhere that resonates with inspiration or fuels your imagination. Devour old films, new films, music, books, paintings, photographs, poems, dreams, random conversations, architecture, bridges, street signs, trees, clouds, bodies of water, light and shadows. Select only things to steal from that speak directly to your soul. If you do this, your work (and theft) will be authentic. Authenticity is invaluable; originality is nonexistent. And don’t bother concealing your thievery-celebrate it if you feel like it. In any case, always remember what Jean-Luc Godard said: “It’s not where you take things from—it’s where you take them to.” – Jim Jarmusch
pop.see.cul : Tell us one thing you remember about your childhood.
Rebekah Campbell : Visiting my great aunt in Atlanta, who was an artist herself in all forms of the word, and being in awe at the young age of 7 of all the sketchs around me and boxes full of negatives, posters covering the walls, and sitting in her lap downstairs in the basement drawing with her.
pop.see.cul : If you could meet a person- living or dead- who would it be?
Rebekah Campbell : There are so many humans I want to meet and talk to, but recently I’ve been interested in Lee Miller, Man Ray’s assistant, lover, and muse, in photo history, she is such an interesting person and I doubt I’d be able to stop asking her questions.
pop.see.cul : What would you do right now if you weren’t answering our interview?
Rebekah Campbell : Not procrastinating and finish some homework or edit photos I’ve been meaning to get to.
pop.see.cul : Our last interviewee, Kayla Varley would like to know: What do you think about late at night in the moments before you fall asleep?
Rebekah Campbell : I think about things that happened to me during the day, and I usually make up situations had they been different, and it goes on and on until I close my eyes at last and start to dream.
pop.see.cul : What would you like to ask our next guest on pop.asks.you?
Rebekah Campbell : If you weren’t an artist, what would you be?
KAYLA VARLEY
pop.asks.Kayla
pop.see.cul : Can you tell us a bit about your background?
Kayla Varley: I was born in Bakersfield, CA and I moved to Los Angeles when I was 17 to attend Art Center College of Design. My first camera ever was a Kodak Easyshare. I think it had 4 megapixels….so I started taking self portraits and whooooosh, here I am now.
pop.see.cul : When did your interest in photography start?
Kayla Varley: I was 12 or 13 when I took a photo with my fathers camera and became obsessed. I’m sure it’s like this for a lot of photographers, that ‘holy shit’ moment happened really early for me.
pop.see.cul : Can you describe your style?
Kayla Varley: My style is surreal. But it is also very realistic….I always said that I wanted people to understand me when they looked at my photos. I’ve created a fantasy land in my head where every girl is beautiful and every moment should be captured…
pop.see.cul : Where do you usually take your inspiration from?
Kayla Varley: My inspiration comes from the every day, the way crust forms over my eyes in the mornings, the way some nights I cry myself to sleep. It comes from my bones. I stare at light and shadow and constantly point up and every which way, never wanting to let go of a moment. That’s my style, if you want to call it one.
pop.see.cul : What are your plans for the future?
Kayla Varley: My plans for the future are to a) get out of bed and b) take over the world.
pop.see.cul : What is your typical day like?
Kayla Varley: My days start with coffee, but before that I stay in bed replying to emails (like what I’m doing right now). After coffee, exercising, and usually a photo shoot in there somewhere. Speaking of which there’s a model coming at 10am and I have to get up!
pop.see.cul : Favourite movie?
Kayla Varley: Trainspotting, Coming to America, Get him to the Greek, etc
pop.see.cul : Favourite song?
Kayla Varley: none
pop.see.cul : Best quote you’ve ever heard?
Kayla Varley: “Everywhere you go, there you are.” I don’t remember who said it but it’s true and it’s something I’m always thinking about. You cannot run away from yourself.
pop.see.cul : Tell us one thing you remember about your childhood.
Kayla Varley: I had a rough childhood. Can I pass on this question?
pop.see.cul : If you could meet a person- living or dead- who would it be?
Kayla Varley: Freud.
pop.see.cul : What would you do right now if you weren’t answering our interview?
Kayla Varley: Responding to any of the other emails in my inbox.
pop.see.cul : Our lastest interviewee, Rhianne Butler would like to know : if there was to be a film made of your life who would you want to play you and why?
Kayla Varley: I would hate to have a movie made about me!
pop.see.cul : What would you like to ask our next guest on pop.asks.you?
Kayla Varley: What do you think about late at night in the moments before you fall asleep?
To see more about Kayla click here
in POP.ASKS.YOU
Tagged interview, Kayla Varley, photography, popasksyou Leave a comment
WHIMSICAL IS THE WORD
FANNY LATOUR
pop.asks.fanny
pop.see.cul : Can you tell us a bit about your background?
Fanny Latour : Here are some random facts : The very first word i said was “goodbye” in spanish to a rhinoceros at the zoo. When I was little I wanted to be an entomologist. My father didn’t want me to own a single barbie doll. The first thing I said to my first crush when I was 5 year old is “are you a boy or a girl?”. I like to cook. My favourite film maker is haneke. I hate beetroot and horses.
pop.see.cul : Where do you currently live?
Fanny Latour : In Paris.
pop.see.cul : What is your typical day like?
Fanny Latour : Thank God, i don’t have a single typical day.
pop.see.cul : What inspires you?
Fanny Latour : Films, experiences, feelings, locations and people.
pop.see.cul : What do you love most about your work?
Fanny Latour : Having the more beautiful memories of my life since I own a camera.
pop.see.cul : What do you hate most?
Fanny Latour : ”Which camera are you using ?”
pop.see.cul : Has there been a particular project you found to be the highlight of your career so far?
Fanny Latour : I don’t think so, all the projects are important and have been useful for me, even the “little” ones.
pop.see.cul : What are your plans for the future?
Fanny Latour : Keep going.
pop.see.cul : Favorite song?
Fanny Latour : Before the Bridge, by Future Islands.
pop.see.cul : Favorite movie?
Fanny Latour : The White Ribbon
pop.see.cul : Favorite store in your city?
Fanny Latour : Guerissol, vintage shop where every piece of clothing cost between 1 and 5 euros.
pop.see.cul : If you could meet a person- living or dead- who would it be?
Fanny Latour : Too many people.
pop.see.cul : What is your best childhood memory?
Fanny Latour : My best childhood memory was when I went to Spain with my family in a little farm totally lost in the countryside. I became almost wild during this week, spending all of my time hunting the rabbits with the dogs and then playing with the rabbits we catched (safe and alive rabbits haha). My legs were full of bruises and scratches, my hair was messier than ever, I was eating fruits in the trees, it was really amazing. I could do this for my entire life
pop.see.cul : Best quote you’ve ever heard?
Fanny Latour : It’s not really a quote but “la petite brise la glace” a french sentence that has two different meanings depending on the way people first read it.
pop.see.cul :What would you do right now if you weren’t answering our interview?
Fanny Latour : There are so many thing I have to get done that I don’t even want to think about it.
pop.see.cul : Our lastest interviewee,Douglas Lyle Thompson would like to know : ‘Now that everyone on the planet is essentially a photographer, how does that change things for our career? Is our photography world too saturated? Does that make us work harder?’
Fanny Latour : Annoying. photography makes me happy, that’s enough for me. I don’t need or want to ask myself about all those stuff, I’m already feeling really lucky to make money with what I consider as my favorite entertainement. I will keep going until it’s not entertaining / making me happy anymore.
pop.see.cul : What would you like to ask our next guest on pop.asks.you?
Fanny Latour : What are you always forgetting ?
DOUGLAS LYLE THOMPSON
pop.asks.Douglas
To see more about his beautiful photography click here
Portraits








pop.see.cul : Can you tell us a bit about your background?
DLT: Having been raised in Southern California, people automatically consider me slow paced and laid back – but it’s the truth. Actually I was born specifically in Long Beach, California. Then raised in Orange County with my two brothers; one older, one younger. Shortly after high school I turned down a couple volleyball college scholarships partly because I didn’t know what I wanted to do in life and I wasn’t ready to leave home. After lots of thought and future consideration, I ended up going to a photography college in Santa Barbara, California for an intensive 3 year, year-round program where I graduated with my degree in Industrial Scientific Photography. After college, I moved around for a little bit then made my way to New York to begin my photography career.
pop.see.cul : When did your interest in photography start?
DLT: In 1994; A friend’s father was a very successful food photographer and the second I walked into his giant photography studio, I made up my mind that I wanted to shoot pictures for a living. My dad let me borrow his 35mm Canon AE-1 for a few weeks to see if I enjoyed it; which I did. After that I was given my first (brand new!!) camera for Christmas by my dad in 1995 or 1996. That’s when I really began to get a feeling for what the camera could do, how it worked, figuring out what film is, how to process and print the film, etc. After I figured out my camera, I took a couple Photography Introduction courses at my local community college while I was figuring out what I wanted to do with my life. I quickly found out what it was that I wanted.
pop.see.cul : Do you always carry your camera with you?
DLT: Yes I always have a camera on me. Whether it’s going to the beach, on vacation, or traveling for work. I will always have a camera around my neck or in my bag. Sometimes it’s cumbersome and annoying to have a bulky camera, but worth it.
pop.see.cul : Where do you usually take your inspiration from?
DLT: My inspiration usually comes from seeing something in life that makes me laugh, or smile. I’m not a moody, dark photographer. I tend to drift to subjects that are bright, have warmth, very clean, usually simple, and some even say mundane. (I have never taken the mundane comments with any disrespect.) Otherwise I find inspiration in the locations I’m in, or the people I’m around. I hardly am alone so I tend to feed off of who’s around me. Inspiration comes easy.
pop.see.cul : Can you tell us more about your project ‘home away from home’ ?
DLT: The Home Away From Home project started when I moved to Paris for a few months in 2006. I was away from the States for a while and wanted to start a project that involved my living spaces. I always had different friends, different people to see, meet, hang out with, but I always had a space to go back to, to call my room, where I can keep it clean, make it messy, do whatever I wanted in that room. Then after Paris I started traveling a lot for work. So I made a point to photograph every hotel/motel room I’ve ever stayed in. I believe I’ve missed two hotel/motel rooms in 6 years.
pop.see.cul : Who are your favorite photographers?
DLT: My favorite photographers are my friends, or colleagues: Sebastian Kim, Justin Hollar, Clarke Tolten, Jason Nocito. And then the old guys like Robert Frank and Harry Callahan, who are not my friends.
pop.see.cul : What are your plans for the future?
DLT: Short term: this coming year 2013, I want to build five really strong, new commercial clients for me this year alone. I plan to travel even more, and work work work. Long term: One weird long term goal I’ve always had is that since I shoot a lot in a very minimal way, I think I’d like to build the most efficient, genuinely kind natured, talented crew – actually have a good size crew with me. But being able to manage keeping things simple, creative, easy, and most important, fun.
pop.see.cul : What is your typical day like?
DLT: As a creature of habit, I do the same things every day!! Usually starts pretty early. On a non shoot day, I take my dog out for an early walk, the start with a coffee, light breakfast, start with emails and checking the news. After the first round of emails I start to research ideas and photos for inspiration. Then another dog walk. The rest of the day is spent emailing and thinking of new things/ideas to shoot, plus two more dog walks – my day also revolves around my dog – she requires a lot of attention and exercise. On a shoot day, who knows…it’s something different every day.
pop.see.cul : Favorite movie?
DLT: Either The Thin Red Line, Days Of Heaven, or Fog Of War. I love all of them equally. Visually beautiful, the music and sounds, and the stories are wonderful.
pop.see.cul : What is the song that you can stop listening to lately?
DLT: Can I list three albums instead? Schoolboy Q – Habits & Contradictions, Nirvana – In Utero, Kendrick Lamar – good kid, m.A.A.d city. I could go on and on and on.
pop.see.cul : Best quote you’ve ever heard?
DLT: In terms of photography: “The world is going to pieces and people like Adams and Weston are photographing rocks!” – Henri Cartier-Bresson – during the 1930′s
pop.see.cul : Has there been a particular project you found to be the highlight of your career so far?
DLT: This past summer I was taken to Indonesia for a couple projects. It’s always somewhere I wanted to travel to so it was a dream come true. I was able to go to Bali, and then Jakarta, and then back to Bali again. It wasn’t the project as a whole that I was excited to work on, but just the whole experience of being there. This year I traveled to the Dominican Republic, Sri Lanka, Ecuador twice, Indonesia, and then Los Angeles, California a bunch, Miami, Florida twice, Palm Springs, California, and all over the New York area and I hope my future in photography takes me to new and amazing places.
pop.see.cul : Our latest interviewee, Lucio Palmieri would like to know: If you were an animal what would you be?
DLT: Haha great one!! After 20 minutes of thought, definitely a bird. A hawk or a high flying bird. I’m tall, so I have a different perspective on the world. A bird’s eye view would change everything.
pop.see.cul : What would you like to ask our next guest on pop.asks.you?
DLT: Now that everyone on the planet is essentially a photographer, how does that change things for our career? Is our photography world too saturated? Does that make us work harder?
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