Nate Larson
Nate Larson (born March 16, 1978) is a Baltimore-based artist and photographer known for examining the role of belief in contemporary American culture. He also has worked collaboratively with Marni Shindelman since 2007. Their most well-known collaborative project is Geolocation, which tracks and photographs coordinates of Twitter posts. The project includes both gallery and public art components. Larson most recently made portraits of Baltimore residents during the uprising in the aftermath of the death of Freddie Gray.
He has taught at MICA (the Maryland Institute College of Art) since 2009. He was a board member of the Society for Photographic Education from 2010 - 2014 and chaired the 2014 National Conference.
Sources
- Wired Raw File
- The New York Times Lens Blog
- Gizmodo
- George Eastman House - Wish You Were Here Travel Photography Lecture
- The Picture Show from NPR
- Hyperallergic
- Vice Magazine
- The Washington Post
- Utne Reader
- Discover Magazine
- F-Stop Magazine
- Fraction Magazine
- Marketplace Tech Report
- Indiana Public Media
- Artsy
- Flavorwire
- Las Vegas Sun
- United Photo Industries
- Light Work
- Blue Sky Gallery
- Collect.Give
- Louisiana Tech University
- ArtsATL
- New Landscape Photography
- The Verge
- PhotoLucida Critical Mass Top 50, 2014
- PhotoLucida Critical Mass Top 50, 2012
- psfk
- Beautiful Decay
- Animal
- The New York Times
- Museum of Contemporary Photography
- Seeing Is Believing at Gettysburg College
- ZoneZero
Template:Baltimore-stub
This article is issued from
Wikipedia.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.