Daughter channels grief into stunning ‘Wonderland’ photos

“The trigger for the way photography changed my life was my mother’s diagnosis with cancer,” artist Kirsty Mitchell says. “Photography became my voice when I couldn’t speak about what I was going through.”

Kirsty’s mother, Maureen, was a beloved English teacher who was passionate about sharing stories. “She wanted to instill a belief in beauty and creativity in children,” the London-based artist recalls. “She collected all these extraordinary books of European folklore with incredible illustrations, and she read to me until actually my early teens.”

Photography had always been a hobby for Kirsty, but after her mother’s diagnosis, the camera became Kirsty’s confidant. She turned it inward on herself, and photography became a visual diary where she recorded all the emotions she couldn’t express in words.

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In 2008, when her mother passed away, she was devastated. “I went through an incredibly hard time,” she says. “I suffered with depression, and I just completely lost who I was as a person.”

Kirsty was working as a fashion designer at the time, but after her mother’s death, she began to take photography seriously. “I think when you lose somebody, you need to channel yourself into something,” she says. “It’s the only way to block out what happened. And so I obsessively began creating these pictures that became the Wonderland series.

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“The Wonderland series is a visual fable of all these emotions and memories that linked back to the stories that my mother read to me as a child,” Kirsty says. Creating the fantastical characters and extraordinary landscapes was her way of coping and commemorating her mother.

As the series began to develop, it became so much more than photos. She was beginning to see and feel life in a different way.

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When Kirsty started the series, she had no intention of leaving her job to become a full-time artist. “But it became this undeniable passion that was all I could think about,” she says. “I felt I had to make a decision. Walk away from my career, or spend the rest of my life sitting behind a desk wondering “what if.” So, she decided to pursue her passion full-time.

The process of creating a Wonderland image is incredibly intense, and it can take Kirsty up to five months on a single photo. She produces all of the intricate costumes, props, and sets herself, and she includes writing with each image. As a former fashion designer, creating the costumes is one of her favorite parts of the process. Her experience working with high-end designers, combined with her imagination, allowed her to develop designs that have no limits, like the costume in “The Queen’s Armada,” which is made from 240 hand-painted wooden fans.

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The response to Kirsty’s work is something she never expected. The series has been covered in Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, and leading news websites from around the world. Wonderland has won two international awards, and the momentum is ongoing.

Now, she is focused on creating a Wonderland book, the culmination of a six-year journey. The book will allow her to share all of the finished images, while serving as a tangible representation of the emotion and dedication that went into producing such a multilayered body of work.

Kirsty will launch a Kickstarter campaign this May, which will allow her to have full ownership over the publishing of the Wonderland book. The projected release will be in time for Christmas 2015.

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One of the bittersweet aspects to the project is the number of people who have contacted Kirsty because of their own experiences with grief. “I had people saying that they felt they could see no beauty in the world after losing their partner, their child.” Kirsty says. “And they’re saying that the photographs, it was like someone opening their eyes again.”

“I lost so much in losing my mother, but at the same time, I have gained so much,” she says. “Photography for me is about emotion and human connection, and it has given me a way to create new relationships with people and to express myself in a manner that I never thought possible. And that has been the greatest gift.”

Visit Kirsty’s photostream to view more of her work
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