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06
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24
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10:00 - 13:00
FULL - Feedback with Andrew Z. Glickman
Muntpunt
Feedback
feedback

FULL - Feedback with Andrew Z. Glickman

01

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06

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24

 – 

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Location

Muntpunt
Munt 6
1000 Brussel

Registration

Registration for this feedback session will open 2 days in advance at midnight. A button will appear below that will take you to the registration form.

If your registration is successful, you will receive a confirmation email (please check your spam folder).

You can only participate in one session.

Space is limited, so please only sign up for a feedback session if you are sure you can attend.

Info

This feedback session is free and open to the public.

The session lasts a maximum of 30 minutes.

Sessions will be in English unless you and the guest speak another common language.

Please arrive 10 to 15 minutes early to secure your spot.

Bring your portfolio (printed or digital) with no more than 20 pictures.

There is no need to send your portfolio in advance.

Muntpunt Ketje

This session is at Muntpunt, in the room called "Ketje".

Muntpunt

Muntpunt
Munt 6
1000 Brussel

Registration feedback

Registration for this feedback session will open 2 days in advance at midnight. A button will appear below that will take you to the registration form.

If your registration is successful, you will receive a confirmation email (please check your spam folder).

You can only participate in one session.

Space is limited, so please only sign up for a feedback session if you are sure you can attend.

Info feedback

This feedback session is free and open to the public.

The session lasts a maximum of 30 minutes.

Sessions will be in English unless you and the guest speak another common language.

Please arrive 10 to 15 minutes early to secure your spot.

Bring your portfolio (printed or digital) with no more than 20 pictures.

There is no need to send your portfolio in advance.

Muntpunt Ketje

This session is at Muntpunt, in the room called "Ketje".

In this session the photographer offers feedback and guidance to help you improve your photography skills. The photographer will be examining your images with a critical eye, looking for strengths and weaknesses in your composition, technical execution, and overall style. The goal is to help you take your photography to the next level by identifying areas for improvement and offering constructive feedback. You will receive tips and suggestions on how to improve your work.

Andrew Glickman

Andrew is an American living in Maryland, just outside Washington, D.C. His photography focuses on street, documentary, and social landscape work. He joined the Washington, D.C. Street Photography Collective this year and is working on a number of series including one about the visual interconnections of people’s lives in public.
While Andrew loves to travel, he doesn’t need to go anywhere in particular to make photographs. One of his most well known series features commuters he encountered on his way to and from work in Washington. Andrew first heard about street photography during a visit to Chicago where he had a chance encounter with the exhibition “Bystander: A History of Street Photography.” A workshop with Joel Meyerowitz subsequently helped him begin a way of seeing and appreciation for beauty in the ordinary that changed his life. In addition to working subsequently for Meyerowitz as a workshop assistant, Andrew has also studied with photographers Mary Ellen Mark, Sam Abell, and Len Jenshel.
Andrew’s photographs have been exhibited in group shows and festivals throughout the United States and Europe and are in a number of public collections. So far this year, he is a finalist at BSPF, the Dublin Street Photography Festival, and the Royal Photographic Society's 165th International Photography Exhibition. His work has been published in a number of magazines (Leica World and Photonews (Hamburg) and books including Street Photography Now by Howarth and McLaren (Thames & Hudson 2010).

Andrew Glickman

Andrew is an American living in Maryland, just outside Washington, D.C. His photography focuses on street, documentary, and social landscape work. He joined the Washington, D.C. Street Photography Collective this year and is working on a number of series including one about the visual interconnections of people’s lives in public.
While Andrew loves to travel, he doesn’t need to go anywhere in particular to make photographs. One of his most well known series features commuters he encountered on his way to and from work in Washington. Andrew first heard about street photography during a visit to Chicago where he had a chance encounter with the exhibition “Bystander: A History of Street Photography.” A workshop with Joel Meyerowitz subsequently helped him begin a way of seeing and appreciation for beauty in the ordinary that changed his life. In addition to working subsequently for Meyerowitz as a workshop assistant, Andrew has also studied with photographers Mary Ellen Mark, Sam Abell, and Len Jenshel.
Andrew’s photographs have been exhibited in group shows and festivals throughout the United States and Europe and are in a number of public collections. So far this year, he is a finalist at BSPF, the Dublin Street Photography Festival, and the Royal Photographic Society's 165th International Photography Exhibition. His work has been published in a number of magazines (Leica World and Photonews (Hamburg) and books including Street Photography Now by Howarth and McLaren (Thames & Hudson 2010).

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