ABOUT
I am a portrait and documentary photographer who recently moved with my daughter and husband from San Francisco to Mount Desert Island, Maine.
I grew up in Indiana and my father sometimes read his poetry aloud. If I closed my eyes, the words created images that floated in my mind and I shivered.
I remember the very first time I shivered when taking a photo. My grandma Bertha was telling me about her chickens, and her toes were interlocked like a clasped hand. I could see where she’d lost her toenail from an axe mishap as a child. I took photos of her feet, and I shivered. Making photographs is deeply personal process for me; it causes me to slow down and reflect as the world unfurls around me.
I owe much of my photographic life to the work of those who have come before me and showed me that no story is too small to be seen. I am grateful for Mountain Workshop and The Missouri Photo Workshop for pushing me to develop documentary stories with more thought and confidence.
I have worked in many different jobs over the years and every one of them has influenced the work I do today: I had a paper route, I mowed lawns. I sold PVC piping and made keys at the local hardware store. I worked in a library. I worked at the university post office. I peeled carrots in the cafeteria in the mornings before classes. I babysat, I waited tables. I was a dishwasher. I taught French in Mississippi through Teach for America. I was an assistant-editor in a publishing company. I taught swim classes. I answered phones for a mail order party favor company. I was a nanny. i managed animators creating a feature-length animation (think Bugs). I worked with a former National Geographic photographer on a global project involving data visualization and human connection. I oversaw a million dollar grant and developed content for engineering educators in Silicon Valley. I tutored students in creative writing.
I am grateful for these opportunities, as they have shaped how I see and how I move in this world.
I am interested in the fibers connecting self to family and other forms of belonging—but also those that may reveal a tension between how we see ourselves and how we feel defined. As humans, we make sense of our world through storytelling. I am curious about the narratives that confine us, the narratives that connect us, and those we create to set us free.
I am available for editorial, commercial and personal commissions, and collaborations.
Also, send me your best palindromes.
— Katherine
INFO
I am available for assignment and commissions in Maine, and I am frequently back in the Bay Area, CA too.
info@katherineemery.com
+1 415-902-1428
CLIENTS
Stanford Children’s Hospital
UCSF
Edutopia
KCRW
Kinship
Conscious Kitchen
Montessori Cloud
Marin Montessori School
Jackson Lab
Main Coast Heritage Trust
The Maine Community Foundation
Milk and Honey NEH
The Salt Market