Photographer Karis Beaumont on learning on the job

CR is collaborating with Black Women Photographers on a series of articles to amplify the work of our members.

For Jamaican British photographer Karis Beaumont finding photography was accidental, though looking back she feels it was destiny. Though she used to pore over family photo albums as a child, it wasn’t until 2014 that Beaumont began saving up for a camera as she was keen to explore her passion for styling and fashion with her friends. The next year her dad bought her digital camera for her birthday. 

“Around that time, I’d found out I had dyslexia in the middle of my first year of studies. The diagnosis gave me clarity on a lot of things, one of them being my photographic memory and thought process,” Beaumont tells CR. “After my trip to Jamaica the following month, I uploaded a few pictures of moments there on my Instagram, which caught the attention of Ibrahim Kamara, co-founder of Guap Magazine.” 

Read more on the Creative Review.

Previous
Previous

Sianeh Kpukuyou on why she celebrates dark-skinned women in her images

Next
Next

Rochelle Brock on the importance of being a “size inclusive photographer”