
Foreign Vessel in Harbor, Dutch Harbor, Alaska by Jennifer Boomer
Jennifer Boomer
Currently residing in Dallas, Texas
Website
jenniferboomer.com
Work Statement
After I finished studying photography in school, I made the move that so many other aspiring photographers make and I headed straight for NYC. I lived in the city for a year, working as a freelance digital technician for various fashion photographers. I worked hard, learned the business and more importantly, learned what type of photographer I did not want to be. After my year of living in the city came to an end, I made the decision to stop assisting, to build a portfolio and to begin my photographic career on my own terms. In the back of my mind I had always kept stories that an old boyfriend had told me about his former job as an Alaskan fisherman in the Bering Sea. He painted a picture of a vast and colorful place, somewhere that I wanted to experience firsthand. I chose to move from Manhattan to The Aleutian Island Chain in Alaska since it was the furthest place west I could possibly move in Alaska and still be in the United States. I have always been attracted to extreme lifestyles and isolated places, so moving to Dutch Harbor, Alaska seemed to be a great place to live and to work at becoming a better photographer. Photography is how I explore my surroundings and what results is photographs from my fascination with what I find. The following “Greetings from Dutch Harbor� series is the result of my intimate 2-year relationship with the environment and community existing on the edge of the earth in Dutch Harbor, Alaska.
Bio
I was born in the suburbs of Dallas, Texas in 1979 and went to the same school with the same group of students from preschool through high school. I discovered photography in high school and it afforded me the opportunity to stay out of trouble and saved me from otherwise boring weekends hanging out at the local mall. At 16, I saw Diane Arbus’ photograph, “Retired man and his wife at home in a nudist camp one morning, N.J. 1963.� It was Arbus’ nudist camp photos that inspired me to venture out of my comfort zone and to photograph people hanging-out at the Downtown Dallas Bus Station. I became facinated with the transitory lifestyle and was eager to photograph the people at the station and to learn their stories about where they had been and where they were going. Needless to say my mother almost had a heart attack when she found out that her teenage daughter was spending her weekend nights at a seedy bus station. Since leaving NYC in 2006, I've been living the gypsy lifestyle, traveling across the country while documenting people and places that I discover.

4 Comments
nice picture~~~~~~~~~
The photograph is beautiful. You must have been cold in Alaska with your tender Texas bones. I cant think of a better thing to photograph than what you will encounter living a gypsy lifestyle. I wonder how old you are and what will happen next in your life.
I too am from Texas and will be moving to Alaska this summer. I see you are two years younger than me and also love photography. You seem very brave and don't mind taking chances for your passion. I hope to learn as much as possible so I can also be a rish taker. If you are ever around Eielson AFB I would be delighted to meet you and talk photography.
I too am from Texas and will be moving to Alaska this summer. I see you are two years younger than me and also love photography. You seem very brave and don't mind taking chances for your passion. I hope to learn as much as possible so I can also be a risk taker. If you are ever around Eielson AFB I would be delighted to meet you and talk photography.