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Ron Rosenstock has been creating images of the world and its people since the 1950's. His view of the world developed from his correspondence with Ansel Adams, his work with his teacher Minor White and as a student of Paul Caponigro. Ron earned a degree in Photography from Goddard College and has been an instructor of photography since 1967 at Clark University. He has exhibited his work in more than 100 shows worldwide and is featured in a number of permanent exhibitions including the Fogg Art Museum, the Worcester Art Museum, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the International Center of Photography.
His most recent exhibit is at The National Museum of Iceland. Ron also leads photography tours around the world including Bhutan, Iceland, Italy, Morocco, New Zealand, Greenland, and Cuba. Over the years Ron’s work has had many incarnations: from darkroom to digital; from large format to 35mm; from pastel dawn to infrared dusk; from vivid colors to black and white. His images are real. In some ways, color might be considered more ‘real’ than black & white. Black & white photography is a subject that is often under-appreciated in this day of intense color. It’s about contrast and tone, form and composition. It’s about the shape of light itself. In this presentation, Ron will explore what he considers to be his ‘favorite’ type of photography.
More information can be found on Ron’s website.