Tom Stone (born July 12, 1971) is an American photographer. His work depicts the discrepancy between the American dream and the American reality, clearly captured through the telling faces of those living on the fringes of society. He is most widely known for his documentary photography of outsider, displaced and homeless populations in California.
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Since late 2005, Tom Stone’s documentary photography has been capturing the often desperate, sometimes surprising, reality of homeless and impoverished Americans. Striving to present people at “some sort of core,” Stone’s work spares viewers nothing of the subject’s situation—be it the frantic sadness in awaken!, the addict’s unwavering focus in beavis, or the contrast of youthful beauty and yesterday’s soil in sadie. His ever-growing gallery raises the question, what separates them from us; what lets us ignore the depth of poverty in the world?[1]
Stone describes his work as photography that’s “about increasing the pool of people who are focused on making lives better in their own cities and towns.”[2]
Born in a Pullman compartment on a train outside Mexico City traveling to Puerto Ángel in Oaxaca, Mexico, Tom Stone spent his earliest years with his mother, Raya Ra, and father, Tony Washington, who is said to have abused her. After his mother began to fear for his safety, she took her son and fled—first “sleeping in bushes in wealthy L.A. neighborhoods” and eventually finding solace with the famed Source Family.
Given the Aquarian name Sound by Father Yod, Stone and his mother (renamed Astral) would spend the next three years with Source family in Hawaii, living happily until the spiritual community dispersed. Until he was 12 Stone lived with Astral and her long-term boyfriend, Djin Aquarian (lead guitarist of Yahowha 13), moving from Hawaii to L.A. to Seattle and back to L.A, where the three spent months living in a van on the streets of Venice.
Always encouraging him to develop his creative talents, his mother home-schooled Stone until she decided to break with Djin for a more “stationary” life for her young son. With his grandfather financing his formal education, Stone enrolled in the 7th grade at the Highland Hall Waldorf School. He continued his creative pursuits, producing art in various mediums including acrylic paintings and watercolor. His interest piqued by the musicals and plays he did while attending high school at Harvard-Westlake School in North Hollywood, CA, Stone branched out to creative writing and film during his college years at Harvard University in Cambridge, MA.
After graduating Harvard with a degree in Computer Science, Stone was a financial analyst at Morgan Stanley. He worked first in the company’s Health Care Group and subsequently in its Technology Group during Frank Quattrone's tenure and thereafter. Notably, he took flash memory maker Sandisk public (IPO). He was also CFO at Autoweb.com and Reply! Inc.[3]
Stone stayed true to his artistic passions after college, spending time doing documentary video work. While creating videos, Stone grew interested in documenting the gripping stories of street kids, and he began his still photography “as a research tool for that.” What began as an aid for another medium has since become Stone’s life work of intimate portraits of society’s readily forgotten.[4]
Stone’s work has been shown in numerous galleries and events including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Artist's Gallery. His photographs are quickly gaining attention for America’s homeless and suffering populations, and such attention all but demands that viewers positively impact the lives of homeless persons in their own cities.