CHLOE Magazine Spring 2015 Volume 5 Issue 3 | Page 118

Felicity Huffman Looking through Jim’s scrapbook of photos is an experience all on its own. From the moment you first turn the page, you know that you are in for a ride. With the tagline “Taste It All” on the first page, one catches the first glimpse of the man behind the lens; a snapshot of the photographer himself as an artist. The photographs are seemingly random yet deliberate. There is an engagement of the senses. When pain is photographed the photos are so good you can almost feel it. A photo of Jeremy Irons smoking lingers with the scent of second hand smoke. You can almost hear the strum of the guitars captured by his lens. Though extremely humble, Jim notes that, “it’s just an ongoing documentation of what’s going on in my life.” Even though he has shot a number of famous faces, and many while they were on the cusp of making it big, Jim admits he really only felt he had come into his own when he did a shoot with Jay-Z. “It was his people who had requested me. And that has been happening more and more recently, so that’s been a weird thing.” There is nothing weird about success, no matter how humble the photographer or artist. And that is what makes Jim Wright, “Jim Wright.” And that itself is picture perfect. Jacinda Barrett