Portraits
Sam Leam, photographed for Vox. Leam was injured during a school shooting in Stockton, California in 1989 when he was 7 years old. He is one of the first wave of school shooting survivors.
Susan Neese and her son Chase Breinholt in their home in Plainfield, Illinois. For the Salt Lake Tribune.
Hannah Grossman, beverage manager at Monteverde Restaurant & Pastificio in Chicago. (For Zagat)
Artist McArthur Binion in his studio. For the London Financial Times.
Artist Nick Cave in his Chicago studio. Photographed for Robb Report Magazine.
Julia Stamberger, CEO, co-founder and chairman of the board of Planting Hope in their Chicago warehouse. For the Globe and Mail
Charles Smith in the Matter offices in Merchandise Mart. Smith is the founder of CS Insurance Strategies and the new corporate wellness startup Method. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Artist Johnny Sampson for the Chicago Reader.
Anne Grauer, professor of Anthropology at Loyola University, in her classroom surrounded by real and replica human skulls. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Bill Newlands, president and incoming chief executive officer at Constellation Brands Inc., poses for a portrait at the bar in the company offices in Chicago, United States on January 24, 2019. (for The Globe and Mail)
Englewood Codes (for the McCormick Foundation)
Lyn McKeaney, president and CEO of the Lodge Management Group, poses in the Bullpen, the back bar of the Lodge Tavern on Division. McKeaney is working to turn the stretch of Division between State and Dearborn into a designated entertainment district. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Joanna Trotter, senior program officer for the Chicago Community Trust. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Ryan Blake, the art lead at Level Ex, in the common area at WeWork Kinzie, where Level Ex rents their office space. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Moises Norena, director of strategic innovation at Allstate, in Allstate's new office in Merchandise Mart. (For the Chicago Tribune)
An Englewood Codes student (for the McCormick Foundation)
ChangEd co-founders (from left) Mike Land, Dan Stelmach and Nick Sky on the river walk. ChangEd is an app that rounds up purchases and saves that extra amount to go toward student loan debt. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Kinsey Gross, senior designer at Truth Labs, at their office in River North. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Marcus Cobb, CEO of Jammber, in 1871 where their Chicago team works. Jammber also has an office in Nashville. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Artist Tony Tasset with a Chicago-style hot dog from U.B. Dogs in the loop, Friday, May 26, 2017. Tasset says that the Chicago Dog is an object that he takes inspiration from because "it has a riot of colors, and it's full of angles and curves." (For the Chicago Tribune)
Reba Cafarelli in the Third Coast Percussion studio. For the Chicago Reader.
Stephen Wright, an account executive at Salesforce, in their River North office. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Gabriela Puma, an IT intern working at McCutcheon Elementary School. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Sarah Oremland, senior consultant for organization effectiveness and talent consulting at GrowthPlay in the loop. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Paula Wolff, the director of the Illinois Justice Project. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Charles Smith in the Matter offices in Merchandise Mart. Smith is the founder of CS Insurance Strategies and the new corporate wellness startup Method. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Genevieve Thiers and Heather Aranyi, who are teaching a class at Northwestern about treating an artistic career like a startup. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Platinum at his store Iridium 77 in the Loop. Platinum uses a bot to purchase limited edition clothing and accessories that are dropped online. He then sells them in his stores. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Hannah Baptiste, product manager at Uptake, in their river north office. (For the Chicago Tribune)
Jeramey Winfield at the Lawndale Christian Legal Center. Winfield is the lead facilitator for the North Lawndale Restorative Justice Community Court. (for WTTW)
Marsha Lee in her Blue Island Home. Lee's son Tommy was shot and killed while being robbed in 2008. Lee is now an activist for gun regulation and is featured in the movie Chiraq. (for the Guardian)
The band White Mystery in Logan Theater.