Field-Of-Study: Photography
Michael P. Berman
Michael Berman has spent almost thirty years photographing the arid border regions of the American Southwest. A resident of New Mexico, he is fascinated by the land and how people use and value it, an interest that grew out of his studies in biology at Colorado College (B.A., 1979), his work there with James Enderson
Marion Belanger
Marion Belanger is a photographer who is interested in the concepts of persistence and change, particularly in regards to the land. In addition to her Guggenheim Fellowship, she has received a John Anson Kittredge Award, an American Scandinavian Fellowship, Connecticut Commission on the Arts Fellowships, and has been an artist in residence at the MacDowell
Adam Baer
Adam Baer was born in White Plains, New York, in 1969, received his B.F.A. in photography from SUNY Purchase in 1992, and is currently working in Brooklyn. He was awarded Artist Fellowships by the New York Foundation for the Arts, the Aaron Siskind Foundation, and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Mr. Baer’s work has
Diane Arbus
Diane Arbus, distinguished American photographer, was born in New York City in 1923 to a wealthy Jewish family. She married her husband, future actor Allan Arbus, in 1941 soon after turning eighteen. Mr. Arbus was training to be a photographer for the U.S. Army, and he and Diane began to collaborate in the medium, finding
Claudia Andujar
Claudia Andujar was born in Neuchâtel, Switzerland, in 1931, and spent her childhood in Romania and Hungary. During World War II, at the age of thirteen, she escaped from Hungary to Austria with her Swiss-born mother. Her father, a Hungarian Jew, was deported to the Nazi concentration camp at Dachau and later died there along