Photoville 2019 | Brooklyn, NY

A key dimension of the Porch on TAP is artistic exchange—connecting the people of Southwest Detroit to the people and places of other communities. This year we extended this practice through attendance at Photoville, a public photo festival in Brooklyn featuring activated public spaces and educational programming.

Gabriela Baginski facilitated five planning sessions ahead of the trip previewing and preparing the group for the opportunities that lay ahead in the numerous exhibits and workshops, coaching young artists on interviewing skills, and coordinating visits.

At Photoville stacked shipping containers, sprawling cubes of printed canvas, and workshops animated the festival. Everywhere the eye could see was layered with inspiration and education. The opportunities came to life as photographers from around the world interacted with the exhibits and each other—trading critiques, innovations, and contact info.

Nine artists from southwest Detroit, 4 mentors and 5 students, traveled together to the exhibit by van in addition to several community partners who were able to participate separately, meeting us in NYC. Member organizations of the Young Detroit Photo Society—Capturing Belief, Darkroom Detroit, and Inside Southwest Detroit with La Sirena Studio—convened daily to share time, stories, schedules and ideas to build on back home.

Several factors came together this year for the opportunity to take full advantage of what Photoville has to offer. Executive Director Erik Paul Howard’s photo series, The Lowriders, was featured in the national tour of ‘The Fence’ that kicked off at PhotoVille this year.

Also Documenting Detroit, a photography fellowship and community partner, hosted a container exhibiting work from current and past fellows including each mentor on the trip—Rosa Maria Zamarron (‘16), Gabriela Baginski (‘16), Samantha Otto (‘17), and Erik Paul Howard (‘17). Behind the scenes inclusion in staffing a container and the access to other exhibitors enhanced the experience for both mentors and students.

The planning, road trip, exhibition, and wandering connected the group to people and places of communities in NYC and around the world—and also in deeper relationship with each other.