Untitled, Photo by Sally Mann, 1998

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Untitled, Photo by Sally Mann, 1998

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One Big Snake (from 'Immediate Family'), Photo by Sally Mann, 1991
sally mann ph.
described secret life of a mermaid to a coworker today and specifically the way the creators being real kids gave it some real interesting storytelling elements where you can see their real lives bleeding in and playing out in conversation with the fictional narrative and other cool stuff like that and he was like, have you heard of this photographer called sally mann? and i literally was so excited when he said that it was crazy. you cannot just say "there are slm/sally mann parallels" to me i will become a crazy person

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Sally Mann, 1974
Sally Mann
We revisit our episode with photographer and writer Sally Mann about her book, "Art Work: On the Creative Life."
I think I first heard of Sally Mann because of the censorship she faced from "provincial" (her word) puritanical reactionaries. Some time later I had the thrill of seeing large scale reproductions of her Southern Landscapes photos in a local gallery:
If you know even a little bit about the American south's history of racism, the photos can take on the feel of a dark dream, a psychic wound only partially hazed over with time. Whole histories seem to rise up behind the photos and stop at the point of speech, handing off to you the baton of their telling.
In this interview Mann reflects on her life work, her struggles with self-doubt, the dual artistic pull of writing and photography, the importance of grit and hard work, and much else.