|
BRIAN
OGLESBEE
|
Brian Oglesbee was born in
After a career as a commercial photographer specializing in large sets
for the Vogue-Wright Studios in Chicago, at that time the country’s
biggest commercial photography studio, he moved to upstate New York,
where he taught photography and printmaking at Alfred University. During
the 1980s he became known for a series of large- format photographs of
room-scenes and still-lifes, and began to develop techniques and
equipment to fulfill his personal vision of what photography could be.
In 1993, Oglesbee was granted a
Oglesbee has been widely exhibited in one-person
and group shows throughout the United States, Europe, and Japan, and is
represented in collections in such institutions as the George Eastman
House (Rochester, NY), the International Center of Photography (New
York, NY), the Museum of Fine Arts (St. Petersburg, FL), the Musée de
l’Elysée (Lausanne, Switzerland), the Museum of Fine Arts (Houston, TX),
the Brooklyn Museum (Brooklyn, NY), and many private collections,
including the Sir Elton John Collection (Atlanta, GA). He has
given lectures and gallery talks throughout the
His work has been included in Face: The New Photographic Portrait, Flora
Photographica: Masterpieces of Flower Photography, and The Joy of
Digital Photography. Portfolios of his work have appeared in View
Camera, American Photo, Photo/Design, Metropolitan Home, and LuxLife
among other magazines.
From 1986 to the present, he has maintained a
studio in
|