Beautiful Exemptions - The Work of Mona Kuhn

Published: June 3, 2021, 8:36 p.m.

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Every now and again there are conversations that flow and sparkle; they seem laden with professional insights and creative gems. Our chat with photographer Mona Kuhn is one, and perhaps it\\u2019s Kuhn\\u2019s self-awareness, her quiet confidence, and an ability to articulate her motivations that make it so. There are few who will disagree that her visual stories, her portraits, nudes, landscapes, and photo essays are among the most assured in contemporary photography, and on this episode of the B&H Photography Podcast we just revel in her good humor and willingness to share process.

We speak a good deal about Kuhn\\u2019s new book Mona Kuhn: Works and how it distills twenty years of an evolving career without ever seeming like a \\u201cretrospective.\\u201d\\xa0 We discuss editing strategies for this and previous books, how she created her intimate series, and why the sustained connections and relationships with her subjects are to Kuhn the most successful results of her extremely well-regarded work. As mentioned, she is very generous with her thoughts on photography, on how she used photo techniques to avoid the \\u201cgratuitous presence of the nude\\u201d and that the human figures she photographs are used to communicate \\u201cbeyond just what you see.\\u201d She also references the work of Michael Disfarmer, how the square Hasselblad format forced her to be creative when photographing the \\u201crectangular\\u201d human body.

In the second half of the program, we cover aspects of her commissioned work and the satisfaction of being spontaneous in editorial work and of exercising the \\u201cproblem-solving side of your brain\\u201d in the commercial sphere. We also discuss the differences between stories told in a book compared to a gallery, how she is comfortable on a monitor using Lightroom, but her book edits need to be printed and arranged physically to cull and order into \\u201cvisual sentences.\\u201d Finally, Kuhn offers a very nuanced thought on the meaning of her personal images, encouraging \\u201ca dialogue of meanings\\u201d and noting that sometimes "quiet images last longer.\\u201d Join us for this delightful chat and have a look at Kuhn\\u2019s other new book, Study from TBW Books.

Guest: Mona Kuhn

Photograph \\xa9 Mona Kuhn

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