| FACULTY | Zorn B Taylor |
| DATE / TIME | November 2, 9, 16 & 30, 2026 | Monday 6-9pm |
| TUITION | $365 |
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Payment & Refund Policy Scholarship Opportunities |
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| FORMAT | In-person; enrollment is limited to 12 participants. |
| LEVEL | Foundation |
| PREREQS | None; recommended Photography I class or Basics workshops |
This workshop explores photography as a professional documentation tool and a practical method for preserving community memory. We will investigate how the camera can record artifacts, stories, and physical spaces, transforming the act of preservation into a sustained collaborative effort. By focusing on the lived textures of history, the course ensures that stories often excluded from institutional records are documented with technical precision and dignity.
The curriculum is built upon an inclusive documentation approach that prioritizes the voices and experiences of the community. Participants will learn to use photography to address historical gaps and assert the visibility of overlooked narratives. Through this process, we shift from being the subjects of history to becoming informed stewards of our own narratives. The final presentation is the Community Documentation Project—a substantive record that synthesizes technical skill with a professional, trauma-informed approach to storytelling.
Students can expect a combination of instructor-led presentations, in-class activities, technical demonstrations focused on archival practices, along with assignments and discussions centered on developing personal projects.
By the end of this workshop, participants will be able to:
This workshop is a space for those who believe the preservation of history is a shared responsibility. We welcome:
Because this workshop addresses histories of erasure, trauma-informed facilitation is the standard. We acknowledge that the act of remembering requires intentionality and care, and we commit to the following:
Images © Zorn B Taylor