I don't think I ever really felt comfortable with photography as my sole medium. But it wasn't really until I became a mother - I really credit that to opening me up artistically, I think because it was such an empowering birth for me - it gave me the confidence to explore different modes of expression.
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It was super-important to me that I would be able to make work out of my home.
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My mum, Jennie Buckman, was a north London Jew who, with my dad, proudly chose to raise me and my two brothers in Hackney.
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I don't like putting the female form behind glass or on a wall, further objectifying it as much as art does.
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I'm someone who lives with the work of artists I've been lucky enough to know or trade with.
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Our consciousness wants to connect through struggle and even pain. So in a funny sort of way, vulnerability is attractive.
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I grew up in a feminist household in Hackney, East London, my mum was responsible in many ways for the feminist stain on the socialist party, and my dad had really strong feminist leanings.
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I was obsessed with American hip-hop as a teenager.
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I want to reduce the stigma of the word 'feminism.' It's not about eliminating and excluding. You can be yourself and still be a feminist.