“HISTORY” by Chang W. Lee will be presented by SB Digital Gallery from December 5, 2008 to January 16, 2009.
Please, come and join us for the opening reception on Friday, December 5th, from 6~10 pm to meet with the photographer, Chang W. Lee.
He is a senior staff photographer at The New York Times and was a part of the The New York Times team who won two Pulitzer Prizes covering Sept. 11 and War in Afghanistan.
Artist Biography
Whether he is photographing the war in Afghanistan, chronicling the ravages of pollution in China or delighting in the Olympics in Sydney, Nagano or Beijing, Chang W. Lee takes lyrical and poetic pictures. He believes that everyone has a story to tell and that every story, no matter how painful, contains beauty.
“Someone shares his story with me,” Mr. Lee said, “then it becomes my story. Then it becomes your story. Then it is history.”
Starting as an intern at The New York Times in 1994, he has developed a unique photographic style that combines an impeccable sense of light with complicated composition and surprising juxtapositions.
Mr. Lee was a member of the teams that won the Pulitzer Prizes for photography in 2002: one for Breaking News Photography for coverage of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the other for Feature Photography for documenting the pain and perseverance of people enduring protracted conflict in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Mr. Lee was also among the New York Times journalists who won the 2008 Grantham Prize for “Choking on Growth,” a series that examined the effects of industrialization on the Chinese environment. In addition, he has won numerous awards in prestigious photographic competitions such as Pictures of the Year (POYI), the Best of Photojournalism (BOPJ) and the New York Press Photographers (NYPPA) annual contest.
Born in Pusan, Korea, in 1968, Mr. Lee came to the United States in 1986 and graduated from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1993.
He is married to the graphic designer, Seolbin Park, with whom he has a son, Gio.
Please join Chang and get to witness ‘his-story’ of 15 years covering the world as The New York Times staff photographer.
Seolbin Park