online learning

LONG TERM PROJECT WITH ANDREW MOORE

Instructor: Andrew Moore | Dates: Six Months - Ongoing | Time: TBD between the instructor and the students | Tuition: $1,115 (Members) $1,350 (Non-Members) or six monthly payments of $212.50 (Members) $250 (Non-Members) | Class size: limited to 5 participants | Requirements: Intermediate to advance level with a body of work underway.

*Please reach out before registering. This program is based on Andrew’s availability.


This six-month mentoring class with photographer and artist Andrew Moore will examine and discuss the students’ ongoing projects. Andrew will share with students his intensive look at the image making process and examination of the formal language of photographs through review, critique and conversation. During this long term class, participants will continue explore a wide range of possibilities to advance their work, while thinking, organizing and presenting their portfolios, exhibitions or editing their books. This class is for students with a body of work in progress.

$1,115 (Members)

monthly payments 6 of $212.50 (Members)

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American photographer ANDREW MOORE (born 1957) is widely acclaimed for his photographic series, usually taken over many years, which record the effect of time on the natural and built landscape. These series include work from Cuba, Russia, Times Square, Detroit, and the High Plains of the United States. His newest book, entitled Dirt Meridian, is published by Damiani Editore and will be released in the Fall of 2015. The photographs were made over a ten-year period along the lands that lie west of the 100 the meridian and addresses the history and mythology of this region known as “flyover country”. The book also includes a preface by the noted author Kent Haruf, as well other essays and an extensive set of endnotes. Moore’s photographs are held in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the National Gallery of Art, the Yale University Art Gallery, Museum of Fine Arts Houston, the George Eastman House and the Library of Congress amongst many other institutions. He has received grants from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the New York State Council on the Arts, the JM Kaplan Fund, and the Cissy Patterson Foundation. Moore’s other publications include Detroit Disassembled, Making History, Governors Island, Russia; Beyond Utopia, Cuba and Inside Havana. He also produced and photographed "How to draw a bunny," a documentary feature film on the artist Ray Johnson. The movie premiered at the 2002 Sundance Festival, where it won a Special Jury prize. Presently he teaches a graduate seminar in the MFA Photography Video and Related Media program at the School of Visual Arts in New York City.


A minimum of three students is required for all courses to run. In most cases, our registration deadline is 24 hrs prior to the start time of a workshop/class. If there is a workshop/class you would like to register for but it is not listed or if you have questions, please contact griffin@penumbrafoundation.org.

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