Claudia Kunin

American artist, photographer, and author From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Claudia Kunin (/ˌkjuːnən/, born 1954) is an American artist, photographer, and author known uniquely for animating photographs to make time-based narrative tales. Kunin has forged an artistic field of her own making. [1] Some of her art requires the use of red/cyan 3D glasses to experience its depth of field.[2]

Born1954 (age 7172)
Los Angeles, California
EducationBachelor of science
AlmamaterUniversity of Oregon
Quick facts Born, Education ...
Claudia Kunin
Artist's image, titled Deconstructing Mommy, subtitled "The puzzle of figuring out my mother's past"
Born1954 (age 7172)
Los Angeles, California
EducationBachelor of science
Alma materUniversity of Oregon
Websitewww.claudiakunin.com
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Career

Kunin's professional life began with a degree in psychology. She quickly became disillusioned with this, however, and began working as a commercial photographer for companies such as AT&T, American Express, Wells Fargo Bank, Concorde Pictures, Pfizer Pharmaceuticals, Ford Motor Co., Sprint Communications, Rolling Stone, Martha Stewart, Wm. Morrison and Penguin Books.[3]. At the age of 50, she retired from commercial photography to pursue work as a fine artist. Using her collection of previous photographic work as well as family photographs, she develops them into stills, and later, animated images. She counts Imogen Cunningham as a source of inspiration.[1]

Her experimental film Spectre of Memory won the award for best short in its category at the BeFilm Underground Film Festival in 2014.[4]

Her work received an honorable mention at the Worldwide Photography Gala Awards in the Digital Manipulation and Collage Category Series.[5]

Claudia took first place in Fine Art Prix de la Photographie Paris for her still series "3D Family Ghost Stories". [6] For her work animating original images by Nadar, "Nadar Trio" took second place in video art from the International Photo Awards.[7] In 2010, Kunin's work was in a juried selected show at the Museum of Photographic Arts entitled "State of Mind". [8] Her image Angel is currently held by the National Portrait Gallery, a part of the Smithsonian Institution.[9]

References

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