Jack Lueders-booth

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Jack Lueders-booth (born 1935) is an American photographer. He retired as an adjunct professor of photography at Harvard, now is an adjunct professor of photography at the Art Institute of Boston.[1]

He has published a book called Inherit the Land.[2]

[edit] Career

He started photographing at the age of 35.

He has taught photography at Harvard University,[3] Rhode Island School of Design, Museum School, Mass Art, and the Art Institute of Boston,[4] and was an artist in residence at Dartmouth College and a visiting artist at Yale University.

His documentary projects include Inherit the Land[5] Woman Prisoners, The Orange Line, The Library of Congress Lowell Folk life, American Motorcycling Culture and The Last Corner Store, and his collections have been showcased at the Addison Gallery of American Art, the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies, Decordova Museum, Fogg Art Museum, Hood Museum at Dartmouth College, and the Museum of Modern Art.

Lueders-booth is the recipient of grants and fellowships including the National Endowment for the Arts, and others by organizations such as the Mass Council for Arts, the Rowland Foundation, the Polaroid Foundation, and the Maine Photographic Workshops. He was also twice nominated for the Dorothea Lange-Paul Taylor Prize.

He lives in Cambridge with his family and is still an active teacher and fine art documentary photographer.

[edit] References

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