How personal work became the foundation of this photographer's success

This film Friday, we're sharing a video profile of Australian photographer Trent Mitchell. Mitchell has been a photographer for more than 20 years, working in both digital and film. He won the Moran Contemporary Photographic Prize in 2015, has been featured in the International Photography Awards, Sony World Photography Awards and more, and his work has been acquired by the National Library of Australia. Flotsam Festival – an annual surf film and photography festival hosted on the Gold Coast of Australia in May – produced the video as part of its Liquid Lens lens series. The series aims to showcase ocean-based filmmakers and photographers who capture "the waves and their riders, while illuminating their artistry, inspirations, and passion for the sea." Mitchell started using a camera as a tool for his art process diary, but he explained that he didn't know anything about the medium, so he couldn't get good images. Then, a few years out of school, he was doing design work, and he realized photography was the perfect skill to add to what he was already doing. In the video, Mitchell talks about balancing personal work and working for someone. He explains that he loves personal photography and that paid work has resulted from that. "You can work personal work into your job as well," he says. "They're not these separate things." Spending time on personal projects is an especially good tip for new photographers hoping to get paid work. It not only gives potential clients something to look at before you have much of a portfolio, but it can also be a critical tool for finding your style and voice. Mitchell also touches on how he doesn't believe the common sentiment that everything has already been done. "Tomorrow's never been done, so there's heaps of opportunity to do new things." He says that while there may be themes that recur, everything's new all of the time, so there are always new things to do. "A successful project is anyone you finish" Finally, the point that stuck out to me the most was when Mitchell explained what makes a project successful. "A successful project is anyone you finish," he said. Mitchell said he has worked on all sorts of things but has plenty of unfinished projects, so they aren't successful. As someone with plenty of unfinished projects sitting on hard drives and in portfolio boxes, this one hit especially close to home.

Apr 11, 2025 - 20:22
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How personal work became the foundation of this photographer's success

This film Friday, we're sharing a video profile of Australian photographer Trent Mitchell. Mitchell has been a photographer for more than 20 years, working in both digital and film. He won the Moran Contemporary Photographic Prize in 2015, has been featured in the International Photography Awards, Sony World Photography Awards and more, and his work has been acquired by the National Library of Australia.

Flotsam Festival – an annual surf film and photography festival hosted on the Gold Coast of Australia in May – produced the video as part of its Liquid Lens lens series. The series aims to showcase ocean-based filmmakers and photographers who capture "the waves and their riders, while illuminating their artistry, inspirations, and passion for the sea."

Mitchell started using a camera as a tool for his art process diary, but he explained that he didn't know anything about the medium, so he couldn't get good images. Then, a few years out of school, he was doing design work, and he realized photography was the perfect skill to add to what he was already doing.

In the video, Mitchell talks about balancing personal work and working for someone. He explains that he loves personal photography and that paid work has resulted from that. "You can work personal work into your job as well," he says. "They're not these separate things." Spending time on personal projects is an especially good tip for new photographers hoping to get paid work. It not only gives potential clients something to look at before you have much of a portfolio, but it can also be a critical tool for finding your style and voice.

Mitchell also touches on how he doesn't believe the common sentiment that everything has already been done. "Tomorrow's never been done, so there's heaps of opportunity to do new things." He says that while there may be themes that recur, everything's new all of the time, so there are always new things to do.

"A successful project is anyone you finish"

Finally, the point that stuck out to me the most was when Mitchell explained what makes a project successful. "A successful project is anyone you finish," he said. Mitchell said he has worked on all sorts of things but has plenty of unfinished projects, so they aren't successful. As someone with plenty of unfinished projects sitting on hard drives and in portfolio boxes, this one hit especially close to home.