Photojournalist Liam James Doyle met drag queen Utica years ago when they were both starting out in their fields, and Utica was doing amateur night at Lush, a LGBTQ+ nightclub in Minneapolis.
After learning that Utica — who’s named after the small Minnesota town where she’s from — was cast for season 13 of Drag Race, Doyle reached out to her.
“We have this meet-cute friendship from before, and I love the show, and I’m such a fan of drag … and [of] her,” he recalls thinking at the time. “I should offer my services.” he says.
For Doyle and Utica, all of the photo shoots — from start to finish — have been deeply collaborative.
“I’m the one with the photography skills and these editing skills, and she has a vision for maybe the light and the location,” Doyle says. He says he feels it’s on him to “make the composition happen.”
Utica, he says, is “someone who really cares about that. It’s so clear that she has such a specific vision for what this photo should look like and how this garment should be presented visually.”
Much of Utica’s drag is story-driven, Doyle says. Take, for instance, her lamé outfit. The two chose to photograph her “in an autumnal wonderland.”
“The color story of her lamé garment is beautiful metallic reds and golds and browns,” he says. And the first thing Utica said was that the garment needed “to live in peak fall colors.”
Doyle agreed, and the pair did some location scouting in Minneapolis, tracking the color of leaves as they changed color.
Doyle loves the way the photos turned out. But he adds that the process was far from professional.
“It was literally us talking and being like: ‘I shot a wedding at this park years ago, and I remember these oak trees. Let’s go there,'” he recalls. “And that’s where we ended up shooting it.”