Moses Mitchell Photography

Moses Mitchell Photography Commercial Photographer/Director of Photography.

It’s not about capturing moments for Instagram, but about reclaiming ownership of one’s story and telling it with intent...
13/05/2026

It’s not about capturing moments for Instagram, but about reclaiming ownership of one’s story and telling it with intention.
When I travel or live within a community, I love walking the streets and observing the walls. The walls speak. They tell the story of what the community is going through, its struggles, its hopes, its energy.
Paris, France.
Moses Mitchell

It’s not about capturing moments for Instagram, but about reclaiming ownership of one’s story and telling it with intent...
12/05/2026

It’s not about capturing moments for Instagram, but about reclaiming ownership of one’s story and telling it with intention.
When I travel or live within a community, I love walking the streets and observing the walls. The walls speak. They tell the story of what the community is going through, its struggles, its hopes, its energy.
Paris, France.

Born and raised in Los Angeles, Introduced to photography by my father, who worked in news and put a camera in my hands ...
30/04/2026

Born and raised in Los Angeles, Introduced to photography by my father, who worked in news and put a camera in my hands early on, knowing I needed a way to express myself with my learning, disabilities. Traveling the world with him shaped how I see people and stories.
What I learned is simple: capture Black and Brown people as they truly are full of life, depth, and beauty. No stereotypes. Even in hard moments, there is still light in us.
“Black Matter” comes from a personal place. During a time I didn’t feel safe in my own country, I moved to Paris searching for something different. Not perfect just different.
After witnessing the loss of so many unarmed lives, I began to think deeply about how we are seen. A conversation with my sister about the science of Black Matter: the universe can’t exist without it. In the same way, we contribute so much to the world—often without recognition.
This work is my protest.
thank you so much for all the support for the book that sold out and the solo exhibit in Boston, which was a super success thank you so much
Photo of
Photo and art work by

Born and raised in Los Angeles, Introduced to photography by my father, who worked in news and put a camera in my hands ...
29/04/2026

Born and raised in Los Angeles, Introduced to photography by my father, who worked in news and put a camera in my hands early on, knowing I needed a way to express myself with my learning, disabilities. Traveling the world with him shaped how I see people and stories.
What I learned is simple: capture Black and Brown people as they truly are full of life, depth, and beauty. No stereotypes. Even in hard moments, there is still light in us.
“Black Matter” comes from a personal place. During a time I didn’t feel safe in my own country, I moved to Paris searching for something different. Not perfect just different.
After witnessing the loss of so many unarmed lives, I began to think deeply about how we are seen. A conversation with my sister about the science of Black Matter: the universe can’t exist without it. In the same way, we contribute so much to the world—often without recognition.
This work is my protest.
thank you so much for all the support for the book that sold out and the solo exhibit in Boston, which was a super success thank you so much
…………………………………………………………………

Photo of .e.a.c.e RIP
Photo and art work by

Born and raised in Los Angeles, Introduced to photography by my father, who worked in news and put a camera in my hands ...
29/04/2026

Born and raised in Los Angeles, Introduced to photography by my father, who worked in news and put a camera in my hands early on, knowing I needed a way to express myself with my learning, disabilities. Traveling the world with him shaped how I see people and stories.
What I learned is simple: capture Black and Brown people as they truly are full of life, depth, and beauty. No stereotypes. Even in hard moments, there is still light in us.
“Black Matter” comes from a personal place. During a time I didn’t feel safe in my own country, I moved to Paris searching for something different. Not perfect just different.
After witnessing the loss of so many unarmed lives, I began to think deeply about how we are seen. A conversation with my sister about the science of Black Matter: the universe can’t exist without it. In the same way, we contribute so much to the world—often without recognition.
This work is my protest.
thank you so much for all the support for the book that sold out and the solo exhibit in Boston, which was a super success thank you so much

2008, Miami. One of the last Big projects I worked on alongside my POPS. He and I traveled to document 30 of the most im...
29/04/2026

2008, Miami. One of the last Big projects I worked on alongside my POPS. He and I traveled to document 30 of the most impoverished cities across the country, capturing stills, video, and real stories from the people living in them every day, and from city officials.
Something like that stays with you forever. It changes how you see yourself and what you have. Grateful POPS chose me to be part of it. Thank you, POPS MITCHELL, and know I’m so honored to carry your legacy. Thank you for believing in me

15+ years ago… and we were already looking at life like “yeah… this ain’t normal” Three faces. One mood.Black creativity...
24/04/2026

15+ years ago… and we were already looking at life like “yeah… this ain’t normal”
Three faces. One mood.
Black creativity has always been this—turning pressure into punchlines, chaos into art, and somehow still finding a reason to laugh.
Because let’s be real…
sometimes the only response to everything going on is a face like this.
Still here. Still creative. Still laughing when it doesn’t even make sense.
Which one is YOU?
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

15+ years ago… and we were already looking at life like “yeah… this ain’t normal” Three faces. One mood.Black creativity...
24/04/2026

15+ years ago… and we were already looking at life like “yeah… this ain’t normal”
Three faces. One mood.
Black creativity has always been this—turning pressure into punchlines, chaos into art, and somehow still finding a reason to laugh.
Because let’s be real…
sometimes the only response to everything going on is a face like this.
Still here. Still creative. Still laughing when it doesn’t even make sense.
Which one is YOU?
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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Paris

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