Archive for the ‘Presentations’ Category:

No Memory Is Ever Alone

Project Launch Grant Recipient
Juror: Rebecca Senf, Chief Curator, Center for Creative Photography

“No Memory is Ever Alone” is a visual conversation between the past and the present. The artist writes, “My dad used to bring out a box of slides that he photographed in his late teens and early 20’s every Christmas. He made us view them on an old projector on our living room wall, telling the same stories every year. It was a consistent memory from a childhood where we moved a lot and I never felt like I had a steady ‘place’ to live and create memories.”

Watch Catherine’s presentation here.

Archive for the ‘Presentations’ Category:

No Memory Is Ever Alone

Editor’s Choice Award 1st Place
Juror: Nicole Werbeck, Senior Supervising Editor for Visuals and Engagement, NPR

“X-Ray Vision vs. Invisibility” is a body of work about the phenomenological effects of vision technologies on the perception of undocumented migrants and refugees.

Watch Noelle’s presentation here.

Archive for the ‘Presentations’ Category:

No Memory Is Ever Alone

Callanan Excellence in Teaching Award Recipient

Frank Lopez is a visual artist, independent workshop instructor, US & MS Photographic Instructor at Greenhill School and guest lecturer

“I have spent the last 20 years learning as much as I have taught and am always searching to navigate the complexities of our current day young people. The students in the Greenhill Honors Program have taught me valuable lessons as much as I have brought solutions to their everyday questions. Together, we work through issues that need to be discussed – issues that remain at the forefront of student experience and life.”

Watch Frank’s presentation here.

Archive for the ‘Presentations’ Category:

No Memory Is Ever Alone

Project Launch Grant Honorable Mention
Juror: Rebecca Senf, Chief Curator, Center for Creative Photography

“The White House China” is a series of photographic and mixed media reconstructions based on the collection of dinnerware at the presidential residence in Washington, DC. Depictions of china are based on the official state and family china collections of the presidents they represent or that of their predecessors.

Watch Kathleen’s presentation here.