Corinne May Botz
Early life and educationBotz was born in Ridgewood, New Jersey.[2] When Botz was a preteenager in Glen Rock, New Jersey, she and her two sisters appeared on a segment of Good Morning America as the "bad example" in a story about children's messy bedrooms.[1] She graduated from Glen Rock High School in 1995.[3] Botz earned her Bachelor of Fine Arts from Maryland Institute College of Art and her Master of Fine Arts (MFA) from Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts, Bard College. For her MFA. thesis project at Bard in 2006, she photographed and chronicled the homes and possessions of agoraphobics.[citation needed] CareerBotz is based in Catskill, New York. She is the recipient of multiple artistic residencies and has received grants from New York Foundation for the Arts and the Jerome Foundation. Botz is on the faculty of International Center of Photography and John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York.[4] PublicationsThe Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death (Monacelli Press, 2004).[5] is a book of photography and prose about the crime scene dioramas created by the amateur criminologist and heiress Frances Glessner Lee.[6] Lucy Sante wrote of the book "The Nutshell dioramas are compelling, a bit disturbing, and engagingly weird—it never previously seemed possible to use the words 'forensic' and 'cute' in the same sentence. Corinne May Botz has done a grand job both in exposing them to a nonspecialist public and in photographing them with such fanatical verisimilitude." Haunted Houses (Monacelli Press, 2010).[7] is a collection of large-format photographs and accompanying oral narratives from eighty allegedly haunted houses.[8] The series was inspired by turn of the century spirit photographs and Victorian ghost stories written by women as a means of articulating domestic discontents. By presenting images of empty spaces, Botz allows viewers to imagine the invisible. Video workBedside Manner (2016) focuses on real-life standardized patient simulations to explore the performative aspect of doctor-patient encounters and issues concerning empathy.[9] The film features the neurologist and author Alice Flaherty, as her role shifts from standardized patient to real patient to doctor. It won the 2016 Grand Jury Prize for Best Short, DOC NYC, Oscar-qualifying.[citation needed] Milk Factory (2021),[10] is a photography and video project that looks at the labor involved in infant care. The video was filmed primarily in the bipartisan lactation room of the US House of Representatives, the very place where laws are decided regarding parental policies and reproductive rights. The project was released during the COVID pandemic, during which the inadequacy of support for working mothers created a worldwide crisis. It won first prize in Pictures of the Year International, Documentary Daily Life Category.[11] References
External linksInformation related to Corinne May Botz |