Photographic Documentation

High quality images can be used for more than a website. Some applications include:
Books, magazines, exhibition cards, mailable portfolios, prints on unique materials.

Documenting your work gives it life.

Whether you are a painter, sculptor, ceramicist, jeweler, carpenter, or creator of any kind, pristine documentation of your work is the best way to get it from you to your audience.

Artists with a focus on museum and gallery showing need documentation in order to interface with curators and directors. The best lighting and camera will make your work sing, and presents the truest version of your art.

Any artwork—from paintings to sculptures and textiles—can be photographed at high quality, turned into archival inkjet prints, and run as a printed edition that allows the work to exist in a new format. Many artists who initially think of their works as three-dimensional enjoy seeing their objects live on people’s walls in the form of a print.

Documentation is the first step in ensuring that your work continues on for decades to come.

See below for documentation conducted by Threep.

Cara Benedetto, Love You
Photographed for Night Gallery, Los Angeles

Sandy Williams IV
Photographed for Reynolds Gallery, Richmond

Monsieur Zohore
Photographed for Half Gallery, New York

Gabrielle Teschner
Photographed for Reynolds Gallery, Richmond

Effie Bowen
Because, you see, this feeling of alive is not so easy to experience

Cecilia Kim
Photographed for The Anderson Gallery, Richmond


Every project begins with a conversation.