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tabitha soren photography tips
Scrutinize your own work. (Photo: Courtesy of Tabitha Soren)

This Former MTV Journalist’s Photos Will Make You See the World Differently

Professional photographer Tabitha Soren shares her secrets for shooting arresting photos.

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tabitha soren photography tips
(Photo: Courtesy of Tabitha Soren)

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MTV lovers will recognize Tabitha Soren as the face of the channel鈥檚 , an effort to get young people to vote. So it may come as a surprise that Soren鈥檚 post-MTV career blossomed on the other side of the camera. 鈥淎fter so many years of working at 30 frames a second, the standard speed for video, I wanted to focus on one frame at a time,鈥 Soren says. The result: a portfolio bursting with thought-provoking images that invites viewers to see sports, movement, and the outside world differently.

Soren fell in love with art photography during a 1997 graduate fellowship at Stanford University and turned that passion into a career in photojournalism. For years, the Berkeley resident worked alongside her husband, writer Michael Lewis, on shoots for Slate and The New York Times Magazine. Now, she鈥檚 branched out on her own, most recently with a well-received exhibit titled .

鈥淚n the Running pictures archetypal figures struggle to escape or arrive,鈥 she says of the three-year project. The photos capture various people running across different landscapes鈥攁 waist-down shot of people running from a car wreck, for example鈥攏ot the traditional spandex-clad runner. 鈥淚 am attempting to make elemental fears visible. Movement provides an opportunity for loss of control, un-self-consciousness, and the pictures describe our shared instinct to survive.鈥

Last spring, the in Los Angeles exhibited Running, and the project was published in an accompanying book. The project later showed at the Klompching Gallery in Brooklyn as well as the Museum of Contemporary Art in Indianapolis and the Transformer Station art space in Cleveland, Ohio.

Next up for Soren: a project 11 years in the making. She鈥檚 currently wrapping up her work on , a project that started as a New York Times Magazine assignment in 2002 for which she tracked 23 players from that year鈥檚 Major League Baseball draft class through Spring Training in Arizona. She decided to follow the players for the next decade-plus, usually shooting them each spring and a few other times during the year as some went on to become stars in the big leagues while other players never made it out of the minor leagues.

鈥淚t鈥檚 morphed into a look at the role of fantasy in American life and the myths that fuel it: failure leads to greatness; the individual is paramount; each one of us has a manifest destiny to distinguish ourselves.鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the exact opposite of a community-based societies like Japan, where the community comes first, ahead of the self.鈥

While she may not identify as a journalist anymore鈥斺淭he pleasure I get from photography has little to do with being or having been a journalist,鈥 she says鈥攈er images and subject matter prove that she still knows what makes for an arresting story. 鈥淭ension is the common factor in my photographs,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 usually some psychological conflict present.鈥

Shoot Like Soren

Develop Your Own Style: 鈥淪elf-scrutiny is crucial to making art that is durable and truthful. Doubt and perseverance can co-exist.鈥

Get the Perfect Shot: 鈥淭o make a photograph, look for imperfection. Everything that moves me can be found in the space where things go wrong, or fall short.鈥

Lead Photo: Courtesy of Tabitha Soren

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