June 13 – September 1, 2024
We are pleased to highlight Carole Glauber’s Personal History published by Daylight Books.
Personal History records the lives of my sons, Ben and Sam—a span covering 30 years. I used a 1950’s Kodak Brownie Hawkeye camera for this work, which I tried by chance, and discovered I related to the soft colors, the imperfections, and the transcendent quality of the image. At centerstage are my sons who we can watch mature from an early age to becoming young men.
This is a book for everyone, for young children to see, discuss, point and identify; and for parents and grandparents to reflect and connect to their lives and experiences. It is also a book for collectors, photobook enthusiasts, photographers, and for thinkers and writers.
About Carole Glauber –
Carole Glauber is an internationally exhibiting, award-winning photographer and photo-historian, based in Israel since 2017. She has a B.S.Ed in History and a M.Ed. and is the author of two books: Personal History (Daylight Books) and Witch of Kodakery: The Photography of Myra Albert Wiggins 1869-1956 (Washington State University Press).
Her photographs have been exhibited in the United States, Israel, Europe, China, and Australia including PH21 Gallery in Budapest, ValidFoto in Barcelona, Head on Photo Festival in Sydney, Festival Pil’Ours in France, Muza House in Ra’anana, Israel, and The Center for Fine Art Photography, Blue Sky Gallery, ASmith Gallery, Soho Photo Gallery, the Griffin Museum of Photography, and the Dr. Bernard Heller Museum amongst others in the United States.
Her book Personal History has received six international medals including a silver medal from the PX3 Prix de la Photographie, Paris and three gold and bronze medals from the Budapest, Tokyo, and Moscow International Foto Awards. Her photography honors include PX3 Prix de la Photographie, Paris, the International Photography Awards, the Tokyo International Foto Awards, the Julia Margaret Cameron Awards, the Pollux Awards, the Mobile Photography Awards, PHmuseum, and the International Krappy Kamera Competition in the Soho Photo Gallery in New York City.
She is the recipient of a Peter E. Palmquist Photographic History Research Fellowship, a Winterthur Museum Fellowship, an Oregon Humanities Research Fellowship, and numerous grants for her photographic research. Her books and photographs are in many libraries and collections including The British Library, the Rijksmuseum, Victoria & Albert Museum, Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and Princeton, Columbia, Yale, Harvard, and Brandeis University libraries. She continues her studies and teaching of History of Photography and making photographs of her experiences and observations based on her curiosity and sense of spontaneity.
Glauber currently lives and works in Ra’anana, Israel
See more of Carole Glauber’s work on her website, and on instagram @carole_glauber