Seeking Family Photos for Purchase











“As far back as she can remember, Rachel recalls admiring the large wall shelving unit of framed photos in her grandmother’s apartment, in Queens, New York. Once while visiting, she was surprised to find these photos now sitting in a giant bowl placed on her grandmother’s coffee table: some old, some more contemporary, and some mere computer print-outs. Rachel’s grandmother admitted a friend had helped her scan her photo collection all into one digital picture frame, now featured on a slideshow.

At this moment, Rachel realized, “there’s such a different relationship between handling and sifting through photos. In a digital picture frame, you see one but then it goes away…and you see another, but it’s just singular.” She began questioning our relationship to the tactility of photos and a value system: how do people put value on personal, family photographs? Is there inherently a different value between digital and
material photos?

Interested in the mundane to the monumental, Rachel is intrigued by what we choose to remember and how. When it comes to a personal, family photo, would there be a conversation about the value put on it? Is it public? Is it private? Does it have a price tag? Examining these questions, Rachel put an ad on Craigslist to purchase family photographs from people. She was transparent to sellers that she is an artist and would be using their family photos for an art project. Sellers could name their price and offer their photographs to her, which led to numerous conversations surrounding the reasons for choosing specific prices. Rachel received a number of personal photos, including photos from family albums, weddings, and even unprompted photos of family members, including children. “It’s a slippery slope of what you’re willing to offer someone,” Rachel concluded at the end of this transactional process. Now, while many of us find ourselves looking at past photographs in what feels like a bygone era of family and friendly gatherings, it feels timely to continue asking these questions: what is the inherent value of our material memories and does that value differ in the digital realm?” – Allison Chaklos Hernandez