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Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { ?s ?p Brady Wilks (born 1980) is a photographer from the United States best known for his alternative process landscapes. He works in historical and alternative photographic processes including acrylic gel lift / transfers and wet plate collodion process negatives, ambrotypes, and ferrotype.Wilks attended Art Institute of Pittsburgh earning a bachelor's, and the Academy of Art University San Francisco finishing a Master's of Fine Arts in Photography. "Brady Wilks is a fine art photographer, print maker, and professor of photography. Currently showing work in galleries, selling prints, writing how-to articles, teaching college darkroom and alternative process courses and workshops in the greater D.C. area. His work has been shown in galleries in the United States with a current focus on the mid-atlantic coast including Maryland, Washington D.C. and Virginia. He was juried into the Torpedo Factory Art Center of Alexandria Virginia as an associate artist. In 2008, Wilks moved from southern California to the Mid Atlantic coast living outside of Washington D.C. in Maryland. He currently works as an artist and educator focusing on alternative and historical photographic processes. In 2009, he started teaching college level darkroom courses as an adjunct professor at Frederick Community College while earning his MFA. In 2011, Wilks started teaching alternative process workshops at art centers including Pyramid Atlantic Art Center in Silver Spring Maryland, and Black Rock Center for the Arts in Germantown, Maryland. He has devised methods of alternative processes and turned them into a series of how-to articles first published with alternativephotography.com. In the summer of 2011, Wilks was awarded a private grant to attend "The Unseen Landscape with Henry Horenstein", a class hosted at Maine Media Workshops.In the spring of 2012, Wilks was awarded a private grant to attend a wet plate collodion process workshop with Mark Osterman hosted at the George Eastman House, and private instruction with France Scully Osterman at their skylight studio. This was a pivotal moment in relationship to historical processes and concept. He is currently working on a wet plate collodion series called "Projections" which is a portrait as still life series, and "Small Windows: Landscape as Metaphor". Although he uses and teaches many alternative processes, his focus is on Acrylic Gel Lifts and the Wet Plate Collodion Process.. }

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