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Jamie Shombert serves as guest arts editor for our Summer 2019 issue (Issue #42).\u00a0<\/em>For each of our 5 feature pieces, Jamie has curated selections from her photography portfolio.\u00a0Keep reading for a brief discussion of her selection process.<\/em><\/p>\n
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Ducts<\/em>: <\/strong>How did you come to photography and what is it that draws you to the art form?<\/p>\n
Jamie Shombert<\/p><\/div>\n
Jamie:<\/strong> My serious foray into photography started about six years ago. Before that, I would take mental photographs and turn them into poems. Around this time, I was experiencing (for various reasons) writers’ block and when my husband gave me a Canon DSLR camera, it was a life changer. Being able to capture places, moods, etc\u2014<\/strong>basically what I couldn\u2019t seem to write about\u2014<\/strong>helped me to access my creative self in a completely different way that in time returned me to writing.<\/p>\n
Ducts<\/em>: <\/strong>Let\u2019s talk about the first two images you selected, for fiction and for poetry. The photo for Miserable Company<\/em><\/a> features the boardwalk at Coney Island, with a delightful slogan for happiness featured on the trash barrel in the foreground. And for Sunlight Savings<\/a>, <\/em>you chose quite an eerie visual\u2014a ghost-like female form, with her head resting at her feet. How did you come to these associations?<\/p>\n
Ducts<\/em>:<\/strong> Let\u2019s continue with the final three photos: the photo for A Widow\u2019s Bed<\/em><\/a> (essay), which shows the skyline of New York; the image for Frederic<\/a><\/em>\u00a0(memoir), in which a couple is haloed in an otherworldly light; and lastly, the visual for Too Soon, Too Close, in Paris<\/em><\/a> (humor), which is probably your most abstract image, a combination of urban wire mesh and plant life.<\/p>\n