VSCO Voices – Ash Adams
Together with VSCO, we’re excited to feature our VSCO Voices grant recipients. The program supports five creators with mentorship and funding to help them give voice to marginalized communities in the United States through art. This year’s theme, Home, drew many wonderful applications and we are excited to be interviewing each creator that was selected for this year’s cohort to learn more about them and their projects.
In this third feature we talked to VSCO Voices creator Ash Adams. Ash is a photojournalist and documentary photographer based in Anchorage. Ash’s project, To Become a Person, examines coming of age in indigenous rural Alaska. Passionate about serving underrepresented populations, Ash believes that the uncertain concept of “home” is one that warrants critical thought and conversation.We spoke with Ash about her ongoing project, what she is learning, and advice she would give to others. Here is what she had to say.Can you describe your path to becoming a photographer?Honestly, I started making photographs when I was 13, and for the most part I just haven’t stopped. After making images of music scenes and the realm of my teenage life for years (including selfies on film before there were selfies), I enrolled in Ohio University’s Viscomm School of Design to study photojournalism formally. My professional career after undergrad continued in various parts of the editorial industry—from fact-checking to editing to writing to shooting—but moving up to Alaska almost a decade ago was the push I needed to go freelance and devote my full energies to photojournalism. It, along with research and writing, is all I do.
Creators can be a force of change when they make work that informs, helps humanize controversial conversations, and reaches the broadest audience possible.What have you learned so far working on this project?I’ve learned that this project, more so than some others I’ve worked on, requires every bit of patience and time that I can give it. And I’ve relearned something I learn again and again: that like most intimate projects, listening and being present, is the first and most important part. The photos come after. And if I’m lucky, there’s something subtler in the imagery that rises.


