Carla Williams | |
|---|---|
| Williams in 2013 | |
| Born | 1965 (age 60–61) Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
| Alma mater |
|
| Awards | Guggenheim Fellowship (2025) |
| Website | carlajwilliams |
Carla Williams (born 1965) is an American photographer. She worked as a photography curator and professor before opening at store in New Orleans. She was noticed by Paul Sepuya after posting her old photographs on Instagram during the COVID-19 pandemic, and in 2023, she published her first monograph Tender and held her first solo exhibition Circa 1985. She is a 2025 Guggenheim Fellow in Photography.
Carla Williams was born in 1965 in Los Angeles, [1] daughter of Evelyn and Wendell Williams. [2] She was raised at a Catholic church during her youth [3] and attended a Catholic school, [4] with her childhood experiences also "infused with New Orleans culture". [5] Williams obtained a BA in Photography from Princeton University, [1] where she created 72 self-portraits for her BFA thesis exhibition. [6] [3] Her advisor [7] Emmet Gowin called her BFA work "the best thesis show he'd seen" during his teaching career. [6] She later moved to the University of New Mexico, where she obtained her MA and MFA. [1]
Concerned about the commercial nature of art, Williams started as a photography curator, [7] working at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (1992-1993), J. Paul Getty Museum (1997-1999) and the College of Santa Fe's Thaw Art History Center (1999-2002). [2] In 2002, she and Deborah Willis wrote The Black Female Body: A Photographic History. [6] After working as a photography instructor at Pomona College (1994) and as an adjunct professor of history of photography and photography at the College of Santa Fe's Marion Center for Photographic Arts (2001-2002), [2] she worked as a photography professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology until 2013. [7] [5] She also served as a board member for the Los Angeles Center for Photographic Studies, a publications committee advisor for the Society for Photographic Education, and arts advisory committee member for the Museum of the African Diaspora. [2] In 2016, she started Material Life, a New Orleans store that sells African-American art. [5]
Williams said of her decision to create self-portraits at Princeton: "I was a young Black woman. I was curious to see my likeness. I was taking Peter Bunnell's History of Photography course, and I wasn't represented in what I was seeing." [7] Another inspiration she cited in her interest in self-portraits was the way "self-portraiture collapsed the relationship between the photographer and the subject" instead of having a third-party set up the camera. [3] She has also cited Alfred Stieglitz's photographs of Georgia O'Keeffe; Catholic art; "images that male photographers made of their wives, girlfriends and muses"; Playboy and Penthouse spreads; and Cindy Sherman among her inspirations. [3] [7]
In 2023, Higher Pictures hosted Williams' first solo exhibition, Circa 1985, where she remade her thesis self-portraits. [3] [6] The same year, TBW Books released Tender, Williams' first monograph which then won the year's Paris Photo–Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Award for First PhotoBook. [6] The book and gallery had come to fruition after Paul Sepuya learned about her old photographs on Instagram (where she posted them while her store closed during the COVID-19 pandemic) and showed them to TBW founder Paul Schiek. [7] In 2025, she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in Photography. [8]
Williams's work was included in the 2025 exhibition Photography and the Black Arts Movement, 1955–1985 at the National Gallery of Art. [9]
Originally living in Rochester, Williams moved to New Orleans because "it really had a hold on me", moving to an Eastlake style house in the 7th Ward. [5] She owns a dog named Ferdinand. [5] She is lesbian. [4]
In 2002, Williams published two books for The Child's World: Thurgood Marshall: 1908-1993 and The Underground Railroad. [2]