Isaac Diggs is a photographer and educator. A native of Cleveland, OH, Diggs received his B.A. in English Literature at Columbia University and his M.F.A. in photography from the Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College. He has received support from the Asian Cultural Council, The Center for Photography at Woodstock, The Lower Manhattan Cultural Council and The Puffin Foundation. His work, which is rooted in a committed exploration of the everyday, has been exhibited in the United States and Japan, and is part of the collections of the New York Public Library and the Walker Art Center, among others. Diggs has taught at the School of Visual Arts since 2000.
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Edward Hillel is a photographer and multidisciplinary artist. His work explores the relationships between art, politics, history, landscape and memory. His publications include The Main: Portrait of a Neighborhood (1987), Speaking Stones (1993), Contes mnemoniques (1997), Fragments - Berlin/Weimar (1999), Edward Hillel; Photographs and Installations (2001), Coming Soon... (2002). Exhibited widely, his work is in public collections including the Museum of Photography (Belgium), the Museum of Contemporary Art (Montreal), the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the National Archives (France) and the National Gallery of Prague. He is a recipient of the German Critics Visual Arts Prize (Berlin), The Golden Sheaf Film Award (Canada), the Prix Alain de Rothschild (France), and the Spiro Institute Arts Award (UK).
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