Hobbies and interests
Drawing And Illustration
Violin
Film
Roller Skating
Reading
Adventure
Mystery
Art
I read books multiple times per month
Emma Snyder
1,115
Bold Points1x
Nominee1x
FinalistEmma Snyder
1,115
Bold Points1x
Nominee1x
FinalistBio
Hello there! I'm Emma, an undergraduate student based in Chicago, Illinois. I picked up a camera for the first time when I was twelve years old but truly found a passion for the art during the pandemic of 2020. Through visual storytelling, I learned how to illuminate and explore the untold and sometimes intimate sides of others' lives.
As we begin to filter back into the world, I'm continuing to reach out using my lens. An indistinct figure, an empty avenue, uncertainty, discovery; images, and emotions for the interpretation of human experience.
Seeing someone's face react with joy, perplexity, or even consternation while viewing my work gives me a feeling I can't describe. I've made contact.
Education
Columbia College Chicago
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Film/Video and Photographic Arts
Minors:
- Graphic Communications
Miscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Bachelor's degree program
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- Film/Video and Photographic Arts
- Graphic Communications
Career
Dream career field:
Dream career goals:
Cashier
The New Dime Store2020 – 20211 year
Arts
Independent
Cinematographyart2016 – PresentIndependent
PhotographyArt2010 – Present
Public services
Volunteering
scrapskc — I organized, bagged and priced donated craft supplies. I also helped organize behind the scenes by sorting the different-sized bags that volunteers would use for donated items.2021 – 2021Volunteering
Harvesters — Volounteerer2020 – 2021
Dounya Discala Scholarship
The Myriad of Buttons and Tragedy
A raindrop trickles aimlessly down the windshield. I trace its path in the glow of passing cars. The bright moving cityscape on the other side of the glass shifts into focus. The elements in the scene unite. The solitary streetlamp, the shimmering ground beneath, the garish neon sign that looms above the vacant parking lot. A stranger, quick-paced, passes under the lamp’s spotlight, illuminated and yet a silhouette. I need to seize this moment before it's lost. The camera’s viewfinder makes its way to my captive eye. It’s about to be mine. Snap. No. No. No. The ISO was set too high. The bleak overexposed image burns itself into my memory.
After attending a summer school class for photography, I begged my parents for a “real” camera so I wouldn’t have to continue improvising with my iPod touch. I found a reasonably priced, secondhand Nikon D700 for sale and convinced them it would make the perfect Christmas gift. It was all I asked for. Wanting to encourage what they saw as an exceptional passion for someone my age, they agreed.
Holding this camera for the first time I was holding my dreams. But, as an inexperienced enthusiast, the myriad of buttons and settings soon overwhelmed me. Perhaps I was too young and naive. I wasn’t ready for the commitment required to master such a special tool. I wasn’t equal to it. I felt foolish.
So, for a time, I put my camera away and fulfilled my need to create through other mediums: drawing, watercolor, charcoal, and acrylic paints. But my wavering confidence only temporarily postponed the pursuit of my passion. Eventually, my tempered but never extinguished desire to capture my world through a lens bloomed anew.
Lives were changed by the challenges of a once unimaginable year that began with the pandemic in early 2020. During the lockdown, it was my camera that supported my spirit. It buffered the immediate effects of the news but also added a dimension that helped me contextualize what we were going through.
Paradoxically, the tragedy and isolation were opening me up to creative avenues I might never have considered. Our isolation hadn’t just begun with the pandemic and now I desperately wanted to explore and illuminate the stories of people out there. I wanted to see their worlds. There is so much beyond me, beyond my present experiences.
When it succeeds, my imagery can tell not only my story but everyone’s story. It can drive a narrative. It can surprise and delight. It can fire emotions and direct passions without simply reflecting on this world. And as we’ve emerged from the pandemic I’m reaching out more, attempting to use my photography to help other people. I want to make them feel something.
An artist picks up an instrument (a pencil, a brush, or a camera) and uses it to craft images that communicate and inspire. These images can influence people around the world and through generations. Exploring concepts, testing aesthetics, capturing moments in time, and sharing all of it through my creative efforts are everything to me. But it isn’t enough to just report my work; I want to add content and meaning through the lens of my own experiences.
An indistinct figure, an empty, forlorn avenue, the suspense, the wonder. The glow of a lonely street light reminds one of the warmth of home perhaps far away. Seeing someone’s face react with joy, perplexity, or even consternation while viewing my work gives me a feeling I can’t describe. I’ve made contact.