When I first started making photographs that I actually liked, I ran into a problem I hadn’t expected.
I didn’t know where my work belonged.
Like many photographers starting out, I shared images in Facebook groups. That was one of the few places where it felt possible to show your work and get feedback. But after a while, it started to feel like throwing photographs into a river of other photographs.
Images came and went quickly.
There was no context.
No real connection.
No sense of building something around the work itself.
You could take classes or attend workshops and meet other photographers that way, but outside of those environments I wasn’t sure how photographers actually moved from making photographs to being visible as artists.
Within the first couple of years–once I began feeling comfortable with my photography–I started noticing that this struggle was everywhere.
Many photographers were doing thoughtful, meaningful work, but they had no real structure around how that work existed in the world.
No intentional website.
No curated portfolio.
No artist statement.
No clear place for their work to live.
It wasn’t just a technical problem.
It was a visibility problem.
The Mistake I Made
Like many photographers early in their journey, I made a mistake that seems obvious in hindsight.
I started copying what other photographers were doing.
I tried to make similar images.
I followed the patterns that seemed to work for others.
I assumed that if I just did what successful photographers were doing, eventually things would fall into place.
But the deeper issue wasn’t technique.
The deeper issue was confidence.
For a long time I didn’t believe I had a voice as a photographer. I didn’t believe that my work was relevant or that I had something meaningful to contribute.
That’s a difficult place to be as an artist.
You’re creating work, but you’re not sure it matters.
You feel like your photographs are just part of the noise instead of part of the signal.
The Moment Things Began to Change
For me, the shift started with exhibitions.
They weren’t big, high-profile exhibitions. In fact, many of them were relatively low-risk opportunities. But they forced me to take my work seriously in a new way.
Preparing work for exhibition required intention.
I had to think about the photographs together as a body of work. I had to present them clearly. I had to talk about what they meant and why they mattered.
Those early experiences helped me cross a psychological threshold.
They helped me realize that building a creative presence is a different discipline than learning photography itself.
Photography teaches you how to make images.
But visibility requires you to step forward and claim space for your work.
Helping Other Photographers
As I grew more comfortable with my own work, something interesting began happening.
I started noticing other photographers who were making great images but struggling with the same challenges I had faced.
They lacked confidence.
They didn’t have a website.
They didn’t know how to organize their work or present it publicly.
Often the work itself was strong.
What was missing was structure.
I found myself sitting down with people and helping them imagine what their creative future could look like–how their work might be shared, where it could live, and how they could build something meaningful around it.
A lot of that work was about building confidence and helping people see that they knew more than they thought they did.
The Idea Behind the Visible Artist
Over time, those conversations led me to an idea I now call the Visible Artist System.
At its core, the idea is simple.
A visible artist is someone who:
- Creates with intention
– Develops a voice through their medium
– Shares their work publicly
– Builds a structure that allows others to encounter that work
Many photographers learn how to make images.
But very few are shown how to establish a visible creative presence around those images.
Recently I decided to formalize the process I’ve been using with other photographers into something more structured.
I’m launching a small 8-week cohort called the Visible Artist System to help photographers establish that presence.
The goal isn’t simply to talk about ideas.
It’s to build the foundational pieces that allow your work to exist in the world–things like a website, a curated portfolio, an artist statement, and a clear way for people to encounter your work.
An Invitation
If you’re a photographer who feels like your work exists somewhere between private practice and public visibility, you’re not alone.
Many artists reach a point where the work is ready, but the structure around it isn’t.
Over the next few weeks I’m offering a limited number of 20-minute coffee chats for photographers who are curious about the cohort or simply want to talk about where they are in their creative journey.
No pressure–just a conversation.
You can learn more about the Visible Artist System here:
Or request a coffee chat here:
Either way, I hope more photographers begin stepping forward and establishing a visible creative presence around their work.
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