Scott McAulay
Scott McAulay
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Spotlight Magazine
Scott McAulay
New Zealand
Although Scott McAulay has built a career photographing the famous, he’s just as interested in capturing the lives of ordinary human beings.
“I love working with everyday people in their own environments,” he says.
Scott was raised in Birkenhead, Auckland, where his father owned a pharmacy for more than 45 years. It was here that he discovered his interest in photography and people.
“My dad had a great rapport with his customers, and I pretty much grew up in that pharmacy, spending a lot of my afternoons helping out. My work today is about making everyday people look strong and a little heroic in whatever they do.”
Scott lives in New Zealand with his wife and son. His clients include Air New Zealand, Visa, TVNZ and Warner Bros.
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Showcase Magazine
Scott McAulay
Portrait photographers
Though Scott has built a career photographing the famous, he’s just as interested in capturing the lives of ordinary human beings. “I love working with everyday people in their own environments,” he says.
McAulay’s skill in creating compelling portraits is evident in both his commercial and personal work. He’s shot the stars of TV shows as Shortland Street, The Block, The Bachelor, Filthy Rich, and Step Dave, as well as New Zealand’s top news and entertainment talent. He spent two months on location in Nicaragua shooting Survivor, and while there, began his project In My Ute, documenting the hitchhikers he picked up each day. Photographs of his young son Oscar have also sent his work in a new direction. “I’ve photographed a broad spectrum of people, and tend to get on well with everyone,”.
McAulay was raised in Birkenhead, Auckland, where his father owned a pharmacy for more than 45 years. It was here that he discovered his interests in photography and people. “My dad had a great rapport with his customers, and I pretty much grew up in that pharmacy, spending a lot of my afternoons helping out.” McAulay has indulged his childhood in one of his most recent personal projects, a portrait series of local shop owners called Birkenhead. “Dad used to drop me at school, and I remember holding his hand and looking up at him as we walked,” he says. “With this project, I’m looking up to everyday business owners who are working hard to make a living.”
''It’s pretty tough'', he says, having a shop and doing it all yourself – and this sense of equality and empathy is exactly what makes his images stand out. “My work is about making everyday people look strong and a little heroic in whatever they do.”