Craig Stevens (photographer)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Craig Stevens is a photographer and professor of Photography at the Savannah College of Art and Design. He is one of the original instructors to teach at the Maine Photographic Workshops, and has authored numerous articles on photographic craft and personal vision.
His work relies on a range of media and styles; traditional black and white silver process, platinum/palladium, color processes and exotic printing techniques such as Mordançage. He also works with landscape, color studies, panoramic format, giclée, and Piezography® processes.
[edit] Collections
- Library of Congress
- Museum of the Chicago Art Institute
- Baltimore Museum of Art
- Foundation Van Gogh
[edit] References
- Stevens, Craig (1985), “Learning to See as the Camera Sees”, SLR Photography, ISSN M1066892, <http://www.craigstevens.net/learningtosee.html>
- Caponigro, John Paul (April/May 1998), “Craig Stevens: The Poetics of Space”, Camera Arts 2 (2): 40-49, ISSN 1097-7953
- Van Riper, Frank (January 23 2006), “The Wet Darkroom Lives!”, The Washington Post, <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/23/AR2006012300809_pf.html>
- Bailey, Jonathan, The Mordançage background and process, <http://www.alternativephotography.com/process_mordancage.html>. Retrieved on 2007-12-24