My Creative Residency at the Notorious Chelsea Hotel.
Interviews and portraits of friends and family created during my very first creative residency.
Hello Friends !
The Chelsea Hotel has such an amazing creative history with iconic people who have lived there over the years. I find it really interesting that it has a whole new life today with the creatives who stay there. I was really thrilled when I suggested that the Chelsea start doing creative residencies and they were up for it. I spent two weeks living at there focused on various creative projects that I was working on. The first one was a special series of my podcast, The Conversation. I interviewed people in person at the Chelsea in my room or I would do remote interviews.It was a dedicated time to focus on creativity and allow myself space to create.
It was great to actually sit down with people in person: Billie Piper was in New York because she was doing Scoop on Netflix. There was Phoebe Tonkin, who I've known for so many years and have been dying to interview her. She lives down the street from the Chelsea, so she popped by, and we did an interview. And then Sloane Crosley—she’s the quintessential New York author, and her book called Grief Is for People had just come out, so she came by.
I think intimacy is a through line in everything that I do. I'm always looking for the true essence of a person. I'm really terrible at surface, at small talk. I'm just terrible at it. Let's just get into it, you know? It was a unique opportunity to be in a creative incubator for a two-week period, and I'm really happy with the work that came out of that. The goal is for people to show up and feel comfortable enough to be themselves. I look at interviewing and photographing people as a collaboration. I'm not here, to push my agenda on you. I have some creative ideas, but what are you thinking? It's a collaborative relationship.
Suleika Jaouad
I got to do a portrait of Suleika Jaouad, who I just adore. She's an incredible writer and is also doing a creative residency and is prepping for her very first art show. She came by after she had spent the day interviewing Salman Rushdie. We got room service, did a portrait, and talked about Lentil Batiste, her new rescue dog who I'm obsessed.
Billie Piper
Billie was in NYC promoting her new Netflix series Scoop and it was so fun to catch up after so long.I photographed Billie for British Vogue 20 years ago and we had not seen each other since. We've had many parallels. Being a famous young woman in the UK is a special kind of hell, and we really connected over that. And getting married young to older men, which in both of our cases were overall positive experiences.
Phoebe Tonkin
I've known Phoebe many years and have always adored her. Whether I'm photographing or interviewing someone it’s such an honor to revisit people over different stages of their lives.
Leith and Astrid
My friend Leith Clark is a stylist extraordinaire and the editor-in-chief of Violet. I shot their current cover out now of Brit Marling. Leith was staying at the Chelsea with her daughter, Astrid, and she had a 30-minute window that fit with my 30-minute window. So she came down and we did a picture that I love.It is just so intimate and really shows Leith and Astrid's mother-daughter connection. Their love is so palpable in this photo.
Busy Philipps
Busy and I are practically separated at birth. We look very similar, we have similar jobs, and whenever I'm doing anything creative, Busy is always the first person to say “Yes, I want to be a part of it.” We have a lovely friendship in that whatever she's doing creatively I also want to be a part of and support her. Busy came by, we did a portrait in the room, all-natural light, she showed up just no makeup, just beautiful Busy.
Elysia Fraiture
This is my friend Elysia. I have known her since she was born as her dad Nikolai is in The Strokes with my husband. She is the most beautiful, sweet, creative young woman. She came by to see me with my eldest daughter, Atlanta. I love her blue eyeshadow and the gap in her teeth. I'm always telling her, never fix that gap.
Marimu
I think one of the great things about the Chelsea is the people who work there. Marimu would come and knock on the door and ask “Can I tidy up your room?” And inevitably, I was shooting so I was like, “I'm sorry, can you come at this other time?” One day, she came and I asked, “Is it okay, if I take a picture of you?” I love the portrait we did; it's one of my favorite pictures out of the whole series. I think it's just beautiful. And she was so sweet and lovely and gracious with me photographing her. That was really special.
Daniella Pearson
At the Chelsea, I had a suite with amazing light that came in at just the right time of day. So I was able to shoot each person who came for an interview, but then also just friends who popped by to see me. Daniella Pearson, the CEO and founder of Wondermind, a mental health platform, was one of them. She just launched a new project called Breadwinner that's about financial literacy for women which I think is so important.
Sloane Crosley
Right before I interviewed Sloane there was an earthquake. I was in the bathroom getting ready to do this interview and suddenly the building started shaking, and I thought, ‘I don't believe this. This is not happening.’
We brought a little LA to Manhattan.
I talked to Sloane about grief, because her book Grief Is for People is about one of her best friends dying. My dad died around that time, and I'm writing a book about what happens when your entire life your worldview gets shattered.
The other thing that I got to do while I was at the Chelsea was work on my other book. It's called A Guide to an Authentic Life, and it is interviews with all of the wise and wonderful women that I've interviewed over the last 25 years. So I dedicated writing time during this creative residency. And because I interview a lot of writers, I get these great tips from them about how to create a writing practice. Every day I would get up and have this dedicated writing time. I actually made quite a lot of progress during this creative residency.
Me dressed for the New Museum's Spring Gala and At the Chelsea with my Monastry products which I love !
It was such a gift for me to have the opportunity to be at the Chelsea and to just let myself create and that's what I did. I was very disciplined about not focusing on anything else. I did go out one night to the New Museum, a gala that my friend Tracee Ellis Ross was hosting honoring Mickalene Thomas. I love Tracee, and Mickalene is one of my favorite contemporary artists so that all fell under my bucket of creative inspiration. It was fun to dress up and [stylist and Coveteur Fashion Editor at large] Sarah Clary was kind and helped me with my outfit because I always wear the same stuff. Whatever is in the bag, whatever is in the closet, I'll put it on. That was a really fun creative experiment. I love how Sarah Clary thinks. I'm going to go with what she picks for me. I wore this epic diamond necklace and earrings and had hair and makeup done. I felt like it was kind of a makeover for my creative stay at the Chelsea Hotel. Over all I would say it was such a great gift to myself to get 2 weeks to allow and focus on pure creativity. Hope you enjoy the work that has come out of it .
Amanda X