Larry Volk is an artist, educator, lecturer and author.
He is an associate Professor of Photography in the Department of Visual Communications at Endicott College and holds an MFA in Photography from the Rhode Island School of Design.
He is the co-author with Danielle Currier of, No Plastic Sleeves: The Complete Portfolio guide for Photographers and Designers, published by Focal Press in 2010 and to be released in its second edition, in 2014.
He has lectured nationally on, digital imaging, portfolio production and art practice. He has served as portfolio reviewer nationally as well as a juror for regional art and photographic competitions.
His work has been exhibited nationally and is held in both private and museum collections. He is a member-artist of the Bromfield Gallery in Boston, Massachusetts. His most recent exhibitions include: 2 Person Exhibitions at Endicott College [2013], and At New England Bio Labs (2011). He has had solo exhibitions at the Bromfield Gallery (2010) and The Rubin-Frankel Gallery at Boston University Hillel (2009), as well as group exhibitions at the Bromfield Gallery (2011, 2010, 2013), and University of Miami (2007). His work has also been presented in an online solo exhibition with The Griffin Museum of Photography (2007-2008), and as a top 50 selection with Critical Mass (2006).
As faculty in the School of Visual and performing arts he teaches courses in: photographic imaging, digital imaging and manipulation, studio lighting, documentary photography, portfolio and senior thesis. His areas of expertise include: documentary photography, location lighting and production, video and time-based production, photographic artist books, digital image editing and production, and fine art digital printing.
How to use our image viewer
Click on any of the thumbnail images to launch the viewer. You can then navigate forward and backward within the portfolio by clicking the left or right side of the enlarged image. Click the add to collection checkbox to automatically add an image to your collection. Image tags or search engine keywords appear below the collections' checkbox and each word or phrase is a link to potentially more image matches.
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