Tag: Sage Sohier

  • Sage Sohier: Passing Time – LENSCRATCH

    Sage Sohier: Passing Time – LENSCRATCH

    Sage Sohier: Passing Time – LENSCRATCH Many artists spent the pandemic revisiting family archives, digging into familial legacies in boxes covered in dusty attics, but other artists finally found the time to revisit their own archives. The indefatigable Sage Sohier is one of those artists, who has a long legacy of documenting the human (and…

  • Sage Sohier, Americans seen – The Eye of Photography

    Sage Sohier, Americans seen These photographs were made between 1979 and 1986 when I was a young photographer living in Boston. In that pre-digital and less paranoid era, families – and especially children and teenagers – used to hang out in their neighborhoods

  • Sage Sohier: Americans Seen | LENSCRATCH

    Sage Sohier: Americans Seen | LENSCRATCH

    Sage Sohier: Americans Seen When I first came across Sage Sohier’s photographs, it was a  little bit like Christmas, each project rich with her unique way of seeing the world. For 30 years, Sage has captured people in their environment with a sensitivity and curiosity that allows us via LENSCRATCH: http://lenscratch.com/2016/10/sage-sohier-americans-seen/ I was interested in…

  • Unforgettable Portraits from an American Road Trip in the 1980s – Feature Shoot

    Unforgettable Portraits from an American Road Trip in the 1980s – Feature Shoot

    Unforgettable Portraits from an American Road Trip in the 1980s – Feature Shoot In the 1980s, Massachusetts photographer Sage Sohier hit the road. She was 20-something years old, recently graduated from Harvard University, and enamored with the street. She approached strangers, toting around a clunky medium-format camera with a flash via Feature Shoot: http://www.featureshoot.com/2016/08/unforgettable-portraits-from-an-american-road-trip-in-the-1980s/ In…