My name is Maggie Innis and I’m an associate podcast producer from the University of Michigan. I’m a junior studying Anthropology and Art, I have an undying love for all things photography and the visual arts. I’m a freelance photographer and part of the street style team at Shei magazine! I'm working with & learning with The Creative Process!
In collaborating with The Creative Process, I’m gaining real experience in the process of curation, interviewing and working with other creative thinkers, and sharing my own work and ideas that come into play. What is great is that it connects me both to Michigan and to other cities and cultures. Mia listened to me and my interest in fashion and anthropology so, while I couldn’t travel to New York to do an interview with the director of the Museum of the Fashion Institute of Technology, I am now part of the podcast and discussion with Valerie Steele, leading fashion scholar who has written over a dozen books about fashion’s relationship to culture.
I have Greek origins and The Creative Process has projects and interviews with many notable Greek creatives and museums. Being part of those podcasts and interviews allows me to connect with my heritage and we are also invited to take part in workshops in Greece with a leading Greek photographer, so allowing me to explore another of my passions.
I have worked the last several years as an independent freelance photographer, however more recently, I've been collaborating as a street style photographer for SHEI magazine, a fashion publication at the University of Michigan, and working on shifting the style of the publication into a more interview-based, photojournalistic direction. I've attached a link below to SHEI! As for my plans for future works, I have a few ideas I'd like to see come into existence in the coming months. One is a photography project, where I'd like to work with local artists and try to understand the ways that things like class and gender come into play with how we define and value art, and to specifically highlight artists without formal training (people sometimes referred to as "folk" artists).