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Lauren MarsolierTransition to a Digital World
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Josef AstorOn Assignment: Agenda vs Serendipity
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Angela Bacon-Kidwell“Why am I here and where am I going?” An exploration of self-awareness,...
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Doug RickardA New American Picture
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Nadine BoughtonAdventures in Digital Collage
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Julie BlackmonThe Power of Now and Other Tales From Home
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Richard EhrlichAnsel Adams Would Have Loved Photoshop
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Connie ImbodenReflections
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Todd BaxterAnatomy of Process in the Digital Age
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Douglas PrinceEvolving Vision: The Testimony of A Living Photo Fossil
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Andrea GalluzzoBeyond The Photograph
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Stanley SmithArt and Artifice: Constructing Photographs
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Ted Grudowski, Mike Pucher, Christopher SchnebergerThree Views on 3D
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Jodi CobbInside Closed Worlds
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Claudia KuninGhosts, Memories and Mirrors
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Michael B. Platt with Carol A. BeaneTransitions
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Joel GrimesThe Creative Revolution
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Greg Downing and Eric HansonPost-Digital: Expanding the Boundaries of Photography
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Brooke ShadenShocking Your Mind in the Digital Age
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Jean-François RauzierHyperphotography

Douglas Prince currently lives in Portsmouth, New Hampshire and teaches part-time at the New Hampshire Institute of Art in Manchester. He has been passionately engaged in creative photography and has taught for the last fifty years.
His work has appeared in numerous one-person and group exhibitions and is held in numerous private and museum collections, including The Museum of Modern Art, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Currier Museum of Art and the National Gallery, Canberra, Australia.
Beginning as a traditional photographer with medium format film cameras, he soon began to explore alternative visions: combining images in the darkroom and making photo-sculptures with images on film. In the late 1990s his photo explorations led him into digital image-making.




















