Jonathan Minster Discovered and Photographed a Series of Boxes Left Behind By His Parents







Some pencils, an envelope, Pond’s cosmetics, a few small toys, a pipe, a rusty tin of Capstan Navy Cut tobacco. These, among others, are the items that Jonathan Minster, an established photographer who has produced work for the likes of Puma, Saatchi&Saatchi and Wallpaper*, discovered in a series of boxes that belonged to his parents, while putting their stuff away after their death.
Ordinary, insignificant things per se, which however took on a whole new meaning for Jonathan, who decided to photograph them for a series he called Memories and Mementos.
The shots evolved from having to clear my parents house, where I found a collection of boxes containing things I had very little or no knowledge of. It struck me that when such trivial items are stored away for years they adopt a sudden and weighty importance but leave the new owner with no clue to their original significance. By shooting the series with the contents as found when I opened them, I like to think that the viewer will consider what they too will one day leave behind, as it is something that we all do.
Keep looking...

Ten Female Photographers You Should Know — 2019 Edition

FotoCal — Photography Awards, Grants and Calls for Entries Closing in March 2019

Thomas Gauthier Tributes His Granparents’ 70-year Marriage with Photos Full of Poetry

Six for Gold — Jake Mein’s Images Explore His Struggle with Feeling Like He Belongs

FotoFirst — Great Portraits of Indian Trans People by Alessio Maximilian Schroder

FotoFirst — Sanna Krook Photographs the Young Students of a Laestadianist School

Brian Van Lau Creates “a Portrait of a Family That Doesn’t Exist”
