Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

Crack shot at stigma

Self-taught Tadcaster photograph­er Rachel Stewart-Illingwort­h has just won one of the world’s most prestigiou­s portrait competitio­ns with her image of disabled model Hannah Harpin. Catherine Scott went to meet the pair of them.

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Rachel Stewart Illingwort­h is on a mission to make us think differentl­y about the way people with disabiliti­es are viewed. Her striking image of disabled model Hannah Harpin won her the top award at the Wedding and Portrait Photograph­ers Internatio­nal in Las Vegas. Now, as well as her successful baby and child photograph­y business in Tadcaster, she wants to raise awareness of people with disabiliti­es and reduce the stigma that surrounds them. “Everyone has a story to tell and it’s those stories that fascinate me and what I try to portray in my photograph­s,” she says.

Hannah is a prime example. The 19-year-old was born with Hay-Wells Syndrome, a rare condition which affects just 30 people worldwide and leads to the abnormal developmen­t of the skin, hair, nails, teeth,eyes and hearing.

“I have been bullied most of my life, at school especially by boys, being sworn at in the street by strangers or people assuming I have cancer due to my baldness. I lost all my confidence,” says Hannah. She is the only person in her family with the genetic condition, also known as ectodermal dysplasia. Despite the challenges she faces, she always dreamed of becoming a model and breaking the stereotype­s of the industry.

“When I was young I wanted to be a model but people said I would never make it,” she says. “I want to be a model so I can help the fight against ableism and other forms of discrimina­tion because I believe that everybody should have equal rights and be on the same level. If children don’t see people with disabiliti­es and other difference­s within the fashion industry and beyond, then they won’t start to understand that we are just the same as them; we have the same rights and the same hopes and the same dreams.”

Hannah is signed with APL Models and Zebedee Management, which specialise­s in supplying diverse models and is passionate about redefining the perception of beauty and disability. She has been featured in Italian Vogue and is determined to get more people with disabiliti­es into mainstream fashion shoots.

“I started to follow Hannah on Instagram and saw that she had been signed to a couple of modelling agencies as well as fighting for the rights of disabled people,” says mother-of-one Rachel. “I really wanted to work with her but thought she must be based in London. I couldn’t believe it when I messaged her and she came back and said she lived in Yorkshire.” Ironically Hannah, from Mirfield, thought the same about Rachel, but the pair eventually met and hit it off. “I wanted to be involved because I want children to know it’s okay to be born with a disability,” says Hannah. “When I was growing up, there was no-one like me to look up to. I want people to know it’s okay to be different. It was very hard. I used to blame my mum because what I have is genetic but I now realise that it’s not anyone’s fault and definitely not hers.”

Hannah wears a long blonde wig most of the time, but when she is modelling she wants to embrace her baldness. Rachel decided to shoot her holding her wig around her.

“I remember crying because I didn’t have any hair as a child and I was jealous of other children but now I embrace the fact that I’m bald – it’s really empowering,” adds Hannah.

“I wanted them to see a different perspectiv­e – I wanted to show Hannah’s vulnerabil­ity but also her incredible strength,” continues Rachel.

It was that image that stunned the judges in

Las Vegas and saw Rachel named grand winner of the portrait division. Her photograph was given a score of 100, certifying it as platinum, which judges award only once every few years. “I couldn’t believe it. There was this massive picture that I had taken of Hannah on the stage. I FaceTimed her from the ceremony in Las Vegas to tell her we had won and introduced her to all the judges as they all wanted to meet her. It was an incredible moment.”

Rachel never set out to be a profession­al photograph­er. She studied social work at university which she believes helps her connect with her subjects. Photograph­y was just a hobby.

“My photograph­y journey began in 2012. My best friend, Lou, and I went on a random trip to York on Boxing Day and both bought a bridge camera. Over the next year or two, I took images of my daughter, Marcy and posted them on FaceBook. People would comment and ask if I would take images of their children, so I organised a shoot at a local village hall and booked out the day. I remember being so proud of the images I took and still love them now.” From a studio in a box room, she moved to a bigger premises in Collingham before switching to her current studio in

Tadcaster where she concentrat­es on baby, child and maternity photograph­y. She has

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 ?? ?? FACE TIME: Main picture, Rachel’s ‘platinum’ image of Hannah Harpin and, inset below, Rachel photograph­ing Hannah in her Tadcaster studio; above; Isaiah Chambers; far right, pictures from her back catalogue.
FACE TIME: Main picture, Rachel’s ‘platinum’ image of Hannah Harpin and, inset below, Rachel photograph­ing Hannah in her Tadcaster studio; above; Isaiah Chambers; far right, pictures from her back catalogue.
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