Juliana Laury is a visual artist who writes.

“ I feel there is nothing more truly artistic than to love people.” -Van Gogh

CEMETERY WALKS

An ongoing art collection, 2022-Present.

Click below to see the full archive:

->Did you know?

Juliana takes her children with her on cemetery walks. She believes that exposing them to the concept of death at a young age allows them to digest this natural fact of life in the way they learn best- through exploration and play.


Check out more of my…

 

“Domestic Poetry”

Poetry Written for Mothers, by a Mother

Want to learn my encaustic process for free?

Listen to Flow:

An 8 episode mini-series created in 2022 during my career shift from photographer to writer after having three babies in three years.

Timeline

Birth->Age 13

I was born an artist. 
Like all kids, I wanted to know the WHY behind everything. (I am still asking that question every day, even now)
I was lucky enough to have had parents who fostered my natural curiosities and guided an expansive childhood. My mother is a teacher and my father is an engineer, and they showed me that life is meant to be FUN. Everything we did, even if it was going to WaWa for a breakfast sandwich before heading hitting the road to visit family in New York, was an adventure. My parents are "Yes" people. They live with their arms wide open to what life throws at them, and the people they meet along the way.

13->22

My life changed the day my parents bought me a disposable camera at CVS. It was sitting on the warm pavement of a church parking lot that I took the very first photograph of true emotion- my childhood friend throwing her head back in laughter. For me, this is when the lightbulb went off. This was when I discovered that cameras were magic.
I thrust myself wholeheartedly into photography. With the support of my parents and high school, I learned darkroom photography completely on my own (pre-Youtube). Suddenly, all of life was a picture waiting to be taken. I photographed everything and everyone around me. I had a camera with me at all times. It was a grounding tool. It was how I began to explore all those WHY(s) in my own way. 

22->26

After graduating from Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia with my BFA in Photography, I hit the ground running living my dream. Newly married and released into the world with the enthusiasm of a young person with their whole life ahead of them, I poured every waking hour into building a business that was representative of my values and my beliefs. My camera opened the world up to me, and because of this work I traveled and met hundreds of new people every year. I was a glorious time. 

26->29

My husband and I both always dreamed of becoming parents, and on November 14, 2017 our first son was born. 17.5 months later, our second son was born. 14 months after that, our third son was born.
While we had both wanted a big family, we were taken aback by their rapid arrivals. It all felt like a whirlwind- like a story I was telling, not actually living. Now, having three boys so close in age is a AMAZING. But I always say it was like ripping off a band-aid, and to say there were some serious growing pains in this time would be an understatement.

29->32

During this time of personal upheaval, I began to explore new forms of art-making. 
Children challenge us to grow new limbs (this feels literal and figurative, most days). Leaving my thriving business behind felt like leaving a piece of myself behind, and my sense of identity was shaken in this new landscape. I was being ushered into a new era of my life, one that asked me to embrace that my creative practice was no longer something I gave to others, but something I gave to myself. 
It was only while having children that I began to embrace the term “Artist”. I came to peace with the mantra “Life is Art” (see video above). I reached for new tools: writing, painting, knitting, encaustic, poetry- and more! I was no longer "just a photographer", I was a multi-faceted being! I was a creator at my core! This is truly one of the greatest gifts of my life- the way that motherhood catalyzed my expansion of self in every way possible. 

Now

My husband's least favorite question to get at work is, "So, what does your wife do?" Recently, he told me he's answering with, "She spreads joy." I love that. 
I am no longer creating one kind of art. Which makes answering that question (and creating a website) tricky to the linear mindset. Thankfully, I am surrounded by people who see me, support me, and love me for the multi-passionate woman and artist I am. Motherhood is the center of all I do, and being an artist mother is as challenging and inspiring as I'd always hoped (maybe more so). I am still obsessed with the same questions I've always been, but now I walk around those questions in a circle and try to explore them from new angles. I create art that can be read, heard, and touched. I make art that is sometimes flat and sometimes structural. No matter the outcome, the process is what ties my work together as uniquely mine.