Work included in "One if by Wonderlust" exhibition at 24CPW in NYC and the "Mapping" issue of Conveyor magazine

Included Artists: Adam Ryder, Alexandra Lethbridge, Aubrey Hays, Brea Souders, Caleb Charland, Charlie Rubin, Colin Stearns, Dierdre Donohue, Jenny Odell, John Mann, Joy Drury Cox, Justin James King, Mary Mattingly, Peter Happel Christian

Mapping manifests in seemingly endless ways; much like photography, it combines individual experience and collective knowledge, and serves to connect us across space and time. The landscape neatly tucked up in one’s pocket provides both certainty and mystery. Abstract borders, creases, and folds promise paths for tomorrow, while worlds unknown sit on the edge of an expansive theatre waiting to be discovered. And so we explore. —Conveyor Magazine

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Arthur Griffin Legacy Award recipient from the Griffin Museum of Photography

Catherine Edelman, owner of the Catherine Edelman Gallery in Chicago, Illinois, selected 3 images from And Still We Gather With Infinite Momentum for the 15th Juried Exhibition at the Griffin Museum of Photography in Winchester, MA. I was also awarded the Arthur Griffin Legacy Award for outstanding work.

About the Griffin Museum, and its founder Arthur Griffin:

Arthur Griffin was born in Lawrence, Massachusetts on September 12, 1903. Originally trained to be an illustrator, in 1929 he picked up his first camera — a second-hand folding Brownie — and thus began a passion that would last a lifetime.

By the mid-1930’s, Arthur Griffin had become the exclusive photographer for the newly created Boston Globe Rotogravure Magazine and the New England photojournalist for Life and Time magazines. He went on to become a pioneer in the use of color film and provided the first color photographs to appear in the Saturday Evening Post — a two-page layout on New England.

Opened in 1992, the Griffin Museum is the embodiment of founder Arthur Griffin’s passion — to promote an appreciation of photographic art and a broader understanding of its visual, emotional, and social impact. Arthur’s goal was to share with visitors his enthusiasm for a medium that is diverse, imaginative and informative.