A portfolio features works that are visually or conceptually related to one another. They should present a “snapshot of the ideas you’re interested in, the work you’ve done, and where your work is going,” says Leah Triplett Harrington. She is a curator in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She explains that a portfolio can also include a statement about ideas you’d like to explore.
To curate her portfolio, Williams identified themes in her subject matter and process. “I wanted to stick with family,” she says. The artworks she selected all represent physical photos, like Polaroids and images of her family in photo albums. In some examples, Williams even documents the “wrinkles from the photo itself” to capture “time and the feeling of aging.” She thought these details added to the authenticity of her work.