This project was a collaboration with my parents, Paula Temple and Adrian Baron-Robbins. Together, we set out to create portraits of one another. We rotated roles between conceptualizer, photographer, and model: one person designed the idea, one person captured it through the lens, and one person was the model. Sometimes two roles were combined — one of us both posed and created the concept, or photographed and directed. Every combination revealed something different about how we see each other. My mother, a painter, gave instructions that resulted in photographs with similarities to her artwork. My father is a musician and an architect, he had no experience composing a photograph and the portraits he took are marked by his lifelong hand tremor, giving the images an unexpected fragility. When it was my turn, I used photography to explore my relationship with them — sometimes including myself in the frame, sometimes capturing them the way I remember seeing them as a child.