I see photography as an infinite riddle, a mode of representation that is compressed but ripe with meaning.

What is central is the act of transformation, the creation of something mysterious and uncanny from an engagement with the world. That transformation is formal and emotional, expressive and just beyond words: magic. Guy Davenport says that he writes for “people who like to read, to look at pictures, and to know things.” Just so. They’re my audience, too. I would say that my pictures are visual poems, or moments of felt presence that propose an emotional, not-quite-expressible truth about the contingency of things.

I received my MFA in photography from the University of Illinois in Chicago. However, visual problems kept me from shooting for many years, when new surgical techniques restored my sight in one eye. Now I am back at work and have exhibited in solo, duo, and group shows with other photographers and painters in the Washington DC area. My photographs also have appeared in galleries and museums around the world and in the book, Second Sight: An Aesthetic, Technical, and Historical Exploration of Infrared Photography. Pictures from my portfolioThe Edge of Vision were shown at Review Santa Fe in October 2017 and were featured in the Washington Post in November 2017. Narrative: Contemporary Photography and the Art of Storytelling, a show I co-curated and which highlighted two of my pictures, was named one of the five best photo exhibits of 2018 by the DC City Paper. In 2020, the City Paper also profiled my approach to picture making in a feature, “How a Photographer with Vision Loss Makes His Art and Masters His Aesthetic.” The paper also included my Shadows and Acts pictures in its listing of the best photography exhibits of 2020. For many years I was a member of Studio Gallery and continue to exhibit there from time to time.