Creative Inspiration and Influences

My first love was antiques. As a child, my grandmother often took me to a cluttered antique shop near her home, where she once bought me a miniature wooden table much like the ones I use in my photographs. I began collecting small treasures—shells, keys, dice, ephemera, tiny ceramic dishes—and arranging them into stories. My bedroom became a museum of little things. Though my siblings teased me (and still do), they now bring me objects that make their way into my work—Italian honeybees, pea tendrils from the garden, oyster shells from Norway.

Another lasting influence was my grandparents’ garden, where they grew the most spectacular dahlias. I remember walking through rows of blossoms taller than I was, captivated by their colors and forms. Today I grow dahlias in my own garden, and they often find their way into my photographs. For me, they carry both personal memory and artistic inspiration—linking past and present, family and creative vision.

After working in an antique store in Boston, I moved to New York and joined Sotheby Parke Bernet, surrounded by extraordinary works of art. Later, in Santa Fe, I was asked to photograph historic Native American pottery. With help from a local photographer, I immersed myself in studio work, and during that time, my friend Sarah McCarty introduced me to 17th Century still-life painters like Giovanna Garzoni and Maria Sibylla Merian. Their palettes and compositions were a revelation, and I knew I wanted to create my own natura morta still lifes with photography one day…it would take me twenty years later to do so.


Sarah McCarty & The Old Masters


The Cinematic Path

My career took me in many directions—commercial photography, food styling, and film. For Oliver Stone’s Nixon (1995), I recreated twenty-five precise replicas of President Nixon’s resignation letter for Anthony Hopkins to sign on camera. Each copy had to match the original in type, layout, and aged paper texture—recreated to hold up to close-up shots and historical scrutiny. (I traveled to the Nixon library to view his papers). It was an exacting blend of research and detail for a pivotal cinematic moment. For the 1999 film The Astronaut’s Wife, the set designer who was Dutch asked me to create an opulent Dutch scene of actor’s (Johnny Depp and Charlize Theron) New York apartment (really the Greystone Mansion in Los Angeles) is meant to evoke the style of a Dutch banquet still-life painting, also known as pronkstilleven. This is used to create a mood of unsettling visual opulence and foreshadow the central themes of the film. I staged a Dutch still-life banquet of papayas, pheasants, geese, and roasted quails—directly inspired by the great food film Babette’s Feast. Each project drew me closer to the still-life language I longed to develop.


The Roots of My Story

Travel has profoundly influenced my artistic lens. While tracing my family’s roots through Sicily, I found myself instinctively collecting evocative fragments of place—fruit and shells from my cousin’s sun-drenched garden, chestnut pods gathered near Versailles, and tiny snails at their villa in Palermo. In Paris and London, I combed through antique markets for curiosities: a miniature brass scale, timeworn silver, and other forgotten treasures. These objects, humble yet poetic, carry stories of their origins—and they continue to appear in my compositions, weaving together personal memory and timeless still life tradition.

When I returned to New York in 2005, I rejoined Sotheby’s, bought my first digital camera, and devoted weekends to creating still lifes inspired by the Old Masters. Encouragement from colleagues was invaluable—especially Denise Bethel and Beth Iskander heads of the Photography Department, and Andrea Kust in Old Master Paintings. In 2009, the Robert Klein Gallery in Boston began representing me, an extraordinary turning point.

Still-life photography enables me to create an environment, arrange objects to tell a story, and direct them into the fantasy I imagine. This brings me full circle—back to my first love of arranging and curating. Beauty is fleeting, yet it can be preserved forever in a single photograph. Creating these heartfelt vignettes allows me to explore love and loss, joy and sorrow—while remaining grateful for life’s abundance, and seizing that beauty.


The Nurtured Garden


My Photo Studio