Sneha Girap (Editor)

Roger Camp

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Roger Camp


Camp king founder roger camp how to start a media ad agency


Roger Camp is a photographer and educator. Initially self-taught, he began photographing in ernest on a transcontinental bicycle trip he planned and executed at age 15 (1961). Accompanied by his twin brother, Roderic Ai Camp, the political scientist, they rode from Orange, California to Dayton, Ohio and the following year to Victoria, B.C., Canada. The trips are chronicled in a two-part article in The American Geographical Society’s Focus (Fall & Winter, 1990).

Contents

Biography

Roger Camp is a graduate of the University of California, Santa Barbara with a bachelor’s degree in English (1967) and a master’s degree in English (1969) from the University of Texas, Austin. He also holds a masters and master’s of fine arts degree (1973,1974) from the University of Iowa in photography.

He started teaching English at Eastern Illinois University (1969) followed by a dual teaching position in English/Photography at the Columbus College of Art & Design (1974). Camp taught American students at the Cite Universitaire de Paris (1990) and directed the photography program at Golden West College, Huntington Beach, CA (1977).

Camp served as a book reviewer for Library Journal (1981) and a contract photographer for Black Star, New York (1990).

Camp was a Danforth Fellow in Black Studies (1969), a Visual Fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center, Provincetown (1982), held a summer seminar Fulbright to Brazil (1988) and is the recipient of the Lecia Medal of Excellence in documentary photography (1992).

Publications

Camp is the author of three books.

Butterflies in Flight, Thames & Hudson, released in 2002 (selected by American Photo, The Associated Press, NBC Today Show in their recommended photo books of the year).

500 Flowers, Dewi Lewis Media, released in 2005.

Roger Camp: Heat, Charta/DAP, released in 2008.

References

Roger Camp Wikipedia