Lydia Panas
Lydia Panas | |
---|---|
Born |
1958 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Known for | Photography |
Notable work | The Mark of Abel |
Website | lydiapanas |
Lydia Panas (born 1958[1] in Philadelphia)[2] is an American photographer.
Biography
Panas holds degrees from Boston College, the School of Visual Arts, and New York University[3] and received an independent study fellowship from the Whitney Museum.[2]
She has photographed for The New York Times[4][5] and exhibited in the US and abroad.[6] Her book The Mark of Abel[7] was named one of Photo District News Books of 2012 as well as best coffee table book by the Daily Beast.[6] She has been invited to teach classes and lecture in various colleges and venues, including the Museum of Modern Art, Lafayette, Muhlenberg, Cedar Crest, Moravian, and others.[8]
Panas lives in Kutztown, Pennsylvania.[9]
Sample of reviews
- "Human Relations Department" by Rebecca Horne, The Wall Street Journal, 3 April 2012
- "Sibling rivalry" by Michael Singman-Aste, SF Weekly, 5 September 2012
- "The Sore Subject of Family Dynamics" by Alissa Guzman, Hyperallergic, 20 September 2012
- "Breaking through the facade - What the hands reveal in Lydia Panas' Figs", 8 November 2013 by Lisa Strelka, Phillips Collection, 8 November 2013
- "The Mark of Abel" by Barbara Pollack, Dear Dave magazine, 2017
References
- ↑ Lydia Panas, Brooklyn Museum
- 1 2 The Mark of Abel, Loupe, Journal of the Photographic Resource Center, Boston University, October 2011
- ↑ Panas, Maine Media Workshops
- ↑ "When Does Death Start?" by Darshak Sanghavi, The New York Times, 20 December 2009
- ↑ "A Drug for Down Syndrome" by Dan Hurley, The New York Times, 29 July 2011
- 1 2 About Lydia Panas, LensCulture
- ↑ George Slade & Maile Meloy (text), Lydia Panas (photos). The Mark of Abel; Kehrer Verlag; 28 February 2012; ISBN 978-3868282290
- ↑ Albright College’s Freedman Gallery Presents Ghost Portraits, Albright College, 7 May 2015
- ↑ Sordoni Art Gallery Presents the Photography Exhibition After Sargent by Lydia Panas, Wilkes University, 1 February 2017
External links
- Official website
- The 2017 Women's March exhibition, Lens/cratch, 8 March 2017
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