Mary Ann (Bruchac) Lynch, born in Saratoga Springs, NY, is a fine art & documentary photographer and writer/journalist who first became known for her b&w portraits of the native peoples of Hawaii (1968-76). Since then, her work has embraced film, digital, and mixed media, with ancestry, spiritually charged places, and popular culture as recurrent themes.
She has exhibited and published from Japan to the Czech Republic; and received awards from AT&T, the National Science Foundation, the New York State Council on the Arts, the National Science Foundation and elsewhere. The 2007 Lucie/IPA awarded her honors (Professional Division) in eight categories; in 2006 Lynch won honors in Editorial (Professional) for FOREVER MARILYN. Lynch’s photographs are in public and private collections from the Center for Creative Photography, Tucson and the Honolulu Academy of Arts to the Leon Constantiner Collection. Recent major exhibitions: Kalapana, a Hawaiian Place (2002, Lyman Museum, Hawaii); Legendary Waters: the Springs of Saratoga (2003, Saratoga Open Space Center and Brookside Museum); Forever Marilyn (2005, John Stevenson Gallery, NYC).
Education: Cornell University (BA- English); the University of California at Berkeley (MA-English); New York University (MFA-filmmaking, 1987). Lynch resides in New York City and Greenfield Center, New York, traveling as visiting artist, lecturer, and reviewer, and as Senior Editor for Camera Arts. Her writing has also appeared in such publications as National Geographic (NY Guide), Insight Guides, Imago, Shots, the Honolulu Advertiser and more. |