Vee Speers was born in Newcastle, Australia in 1962. She is an Austrialian photographer living in Paris. She studied photography and fine art at Queensland College of Art in Brisbane, after which she worked for 5 years as a stills photographer for the company ABC Television and Radio. After a short stay in france in 1990, she then decided to make a permanent move to Paris, which she described as having 'unlimited potential and endless creative inspiration'.
In 2002, she decided to visit the 1920's world of Les Maisons closes in Paris and used the backdrop of actual luxurious locations (these are still intact today).
During this time, Speers began photographing eccentric people she met on her travels, in order to show her admiration and ambition to photograph those who 'dare to be different'. However, it wasn't until she looked towards her own family and childhood for photographic inspiration that she became truly known in the world of art for the series 'The Birthday Party', however, she also has many other series of portraits, all equally unusual, such as 'Thirteen', 'Bordello' and 'Immortal'. In her photos, Speers likes to explore hidden realities, and says 'my photographs are linked to the human condition, the complexity of who we really are beneath the surface'.
The Birthday Party (pictured above) is Vee Speers' first series of photographs and it was they that truly established her place in the art world. It is a series of portraits, all of huaunting beautiful children. They are all very simple, and through their simplicity creates visual intensity, reminding us that the violence and conflict of the modern world is the reality of life underneath the costume fantasies children often appear to live in. The photo's seem to demand an emotional reaction from the viewer as you look at them, as the children quietly seeming to stare straight through you in a ghostly manner, telling you of the underlaying traumas in their lives. The key to these portraits is Vee Speers' gift to be able to blur the line between fantasy and reality, bizarre and beautiful, leaving a sense of unease with the viewer as they look at these photographs. Some people see these unusual portraits as portraits not of children, but of different aspects of childhood that are generally unaknowledged.
The photos were inspired after Speers watched her children playing dress up and shot against the same grey wall on the rooftop of her Paris appartement over the course of two summers. Speers said 'I always shot them against the same old grey wall in order to keep all the photos visually and conceptually consistent. After that each one tells a different story; different emotion and personality - depending on the child or the costume, or the attitude'.
The 'Immortal' Series (pictured above)
The Thirteen Series (pictured above)
My SlideShare on Vee Speers: