|
Henry Gilpin has taught photography to students at Monterey Peninsula College since 1963. A background in engineering probably helped Gilpin's understanding of the technical process of photography, an area that Ansel Adams mastered, and Henry Gilpin soon began teaching.
Gilpin's motto for his students is: Do it right, do it yourself, and use the Zone System. Although Gilpin personally chose to remain with his first love of the full-tonal-range silver print, he encourages his students to learn the new tools of photography, the digital tools.
Gilpin enjoys making landscapes and abstracts mostly. [He refers to abstracts as designs]. He also prefers to work with black-and-white film. He uses a 2 1/4" x 2 1/4" or 5" x 7" format camera.
Aside from his college teaching career, he has been instructor for many workshops over the years, including Ansel Adams workshops in Yosemite; the Friends of Photography; Owens Valley Workshops; John Sexton Workshops; University of California, Santa Cruz workshop; and the University of Alaska.
Henry Gilpin's work has been collected and exhibited internationally. He lives with his wife, Doris, on the Monterey Peninsula.
|