Late in 2014 photographer Jillian Powers started a series that would shape the way women viewed their bodies. With her project "I Woke Up Like This," she artistically portrayed everyday women and stories that had previously gone untold.
Our writer Ryan Deasley recently spoke with Jillian to find out a bit more about this project and why it is so important to her.
How did you first get into photography?
When I was eleven years old, my grandfather took me on a small tour of the midwest. South Dakota, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Colorado. Some of my favorite states to this day. At the very beginning of that trip, he put a digital camera into my hand and told me to shoot as much as possible. He taught me the rule of thirds, my favorite thing to photograph was initially landscapes because of the trip. From there, I messed around with cameras for about two years before buying a DSLR my freshman year of high school. I started my own business at age sixteen and I've been shooting mainly weddings since then.
What drove you to start this project?
It was sort of an accident, actually. The day before my roommates boudoir session, I wanted to check out how the lighting at 8AM looked like on her bare chest. My room has an amazing amount of natural light and it creeps in during that time of day beautifully....so we snapped a few shots right after she woke up. As we began to edit them, I fell in love with them immediately. Easily one of my favorite photographs I've ever taken. And all she could see was her breasts, and how they sagged lower than she'd prefer. And it kind of destroyed me. Not only because I personally loved the photograph but because Aliya is the type of girl who you look up to for her confidence. And she had just lost thirty pounds through months of hard work at the gym. That night, I decided to start photographing women at that same time of day...completely nude...and right after they wake up. Hence, the title of the project.
I just wanted to stop this type of thinking, this unhappiness with peoples bodies. So many of my friends would talk about hating the things they couldn't change, and it broke my heart.