Steampunk Portraits: Officer Prescott

June 5, 2023
2 mins read

Last time, I described documenting the first night of the Auxienita live action role-playing experience in snapshots using flash. Now we’ll look at the Auxientia steampunk portraits.

The studio photography sessions at Auxientia were awesome. As I did last last year, I deliver the Auxientia portraits to the subjects who commission them, both as color photographs and as digitally-created daguerreotype-style images. At the end of the process, the subjects receive a full, detailed retouch and a high-end, matted, printed version of their favorite(s).

Our first subject was Deana Vazquez. Deana and I have collaborated on many photography and storytelling experiences in the past. Here are just a few of them: 

Woman of a Thousand Faces

Deana is one of the Auxientia game’s staff. She plays a handful of characters over the course of three days, donning and doffing a multitude of hats and costume pieces and adopting physicalities and voices for all the characters she plays. To help her in this task, Deana travels with a (BIG) stock of costume pieces. These she swaps out continuously through the weekend, one moment an elderly grandmother, the next moment an authoritative police officer. 

This was the second story set in the Auxientia steampunk fantasy setting. Auxientia features airships, wyverns, inventions, politics, diplomacy, and the various factions of a fantastical nineteenth-century city in a time of change. Since the first story, the officer character Deana created has solidified into a familiar personality within the world. Not just a random officer, but Officer Prescott. There are only a few staff members playing all the various characters that populate the city. Deana’s Officer Prescott therefore became the avatar for the police force of Auxientia. She’s the face and personality that represents the officers of the law. Thus, of all the character options Deana could immortalize in portrait form, Prescott was the one she chose. 

It would be a fun challenge to create a portrait of all of Deana’s characters for Auxientia someday. She contains multitudes!

Patron of the Arts

Another thing I appreciate and admire Deana for is the way she values art and artists. In her live action role-play activities, Deana is a patron of the arts and creative visual artists. She commissions sketches, paintings, and photographs of the characters she and her friends play, from multiple artists, which you can see on her Instagram. I’ve read a great deal of talk over the years about paying artists for work; I personally don’t know anyone who does this more than Deana. As a result, she has so many meaningful artworks from her experiences in life and LARP over the past few years. As one of the artists she’s supported, I am grateful to Deana for bringing me in to make art with her.

Last year, I focused more on the daguerreotypes I learned from digital artist Chris Spooner, as they were the in-world versions of the portraits that I felt helped create the mood of Auxientia. Now that I’m more comfortable with the daguerreotype process, I’m spending more time on color and the tonal values of the photographs. I look forward to showing off the rest of the steampunk portraits in the coming weeks!

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Steven Townshend is a fine art/portrait photographer and writer with a background in theatre, written narrative, and award-winning game design. As a young artist, Steven toured the US and Canada performing in Shakespeare companies while journaling their moments on paper and film. In his transition from stage to page, Steven continued to work as a theatre photographer, capturing dramatic scenes while incorporating elements of costume, makeup, and theatrical lighting in his work. Drawn to stories set in other times and places, Steven creates works through which fellow dreamers and time travelers might examine their own humanity or find familiar comfort in the reflections of the people and places of a distant era.

The All Worlds Traveller

Welcome to The All Worlds Traveller, an eclectic collection of thoughts, pictures, and stories from a Distant Era. Illustrated with Distant Era art and photographs, these pages explore the stories and worlds of people beyond the here and now, and the people and creative processes behind such stories. This is a blog about photography and narrative; history and myth; fantasy, science-fiction, and the weird; creation and experience. This is a blog about stories.

Steven Townshend

I’m Steven Townshend—your guide, scribe, editor, and humble narrator. The All Worlds Traveller is my personal publication, an exploratory conversation about stories and how we interact with them, from photographs to narratives to games—a kind of variety show in print. It is a conversation with other artists who explore the past, the future, and the fantastical in their work. Not one world—but all worlds. Where Distant Era shows stories in images, The All Worlds Traveller is all about the words.

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About a Distant Era

Distant Era creates fine art and portrait photographs of people and places from imagined pasts, possible futures, and magical realities. In collaboration with other artists, we evoke these distant eras with theatrical costume and makeup, evocative scenery, and deliberate lighting, and we enhance them with contemporary tools to cast these captured moments in the light of long ago or far away. We long to walk the lion-decorated streets of Babylon, to visit alien worlds aboard an interstellar vessel, and to observe the native dances of elves. Our images are windows to speculative realities and postcards from the past. They are consolation for fellow time travelers who long to look beyond the familiar scenery of the present and gaze upon the people and places of a distant era.

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