The New York-based photographer Lois Conner has been traveling the world with a 7"x17” banquet camera nearly half a century. Through the elongated format of her work she has explored the landscape and the temper of our times.

The New York-based photographer Lois Conner has been traveling the world with a 7"x17” banquet camera nearly half a century. Through the elongated format of her work she has explored the landscape and the temper of our times.

 

Her art is contemporary, and her vision ‘a long view’ that captures the eternal in the moment, timelessness. Conner’s work is that of the artist-artisan: every aspect of her art involves hand made prints executed with demanding techniques of platinum printing. In recent years she has employed digital technologies to expand the format of her work, embracing landscapes from the natural to the man-made. Her annual trips to China since 1984 have allowed her to follow the transformation of the People’s Republic and to share her unique understanding of the country’s changing urban and rural mien, as well as the vistas that inspired China’s unique culture.

 

Conner has been based in New York City since 1971, where she worked for the United Nations until 1984. During that time she was awarded a Bachelor in Fine Arts (photography) from the Pratt Institute and a Master’s degree from the Yale School of Art. Conner has also taught photography since, including over a decade as professor of photography at Yale.