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bio
Lori Grinker began her photographic career in 1981 while
a student at Parsons School of Design when Inside Sports published
her photo-essay about a young boxer as its cover story. During that
time she met another young boxer, 13 year-old Mike Tyson, who she
documented for the following decade. Since then, in addition to
her reportage of events such as the destruction of the World Trade
Center, she has delved into several long-term projects, and published
two books: The Invisible Thread: A Portrait of Jewish American
Women (Jewish Publication Society, 1989, 6 editions), and Afterwar:
Veterans from a World in Conflict (de.MO, March 2005).
Published in major magazines, her work has earned international
recognition, garnering a World Press Photo Foundation Prize, a W.
Eugene Smith Memorial Fund fellowship, the Ernst Hass Grant, The
Santa Fe Center for Photography Project Grant, and a Hasselblad
Foundation Grant, among others. Her photographs have been exhibited
in solo and group exhibitions around the world and are in many private
and museum collections including: The International Center of Photography
(ICP), The Jewish Museum in New York City, The Museum of Fine Arts,
Houston, and The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
Between editorial assignments and personal projects, Grinker lectures,
teaches workshops, and is on the faculty of the ICP in New York
City. She is represented by the Nailya Alexander Gallery in New
York and has been a member of Contact Press Images since 1988.
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