Daniel Arsenault

Daniel Arsenault is an American photographer who specializes in photos of urban settings in Manhattan, New York City. His most common technique is to take photographs with a film camera and then manipulate the images digitally to make them appear more "gritty."[1]

Arsenault studied art and photography at the San Francisco Art Institute and received a BFA from the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California.[2]

Exhibitions

Group

  • The Edward Carter Gallery, Soho NYC (June–August 2001)
  • Albers-Roesch Studio, “American Dream Swimming Pool”, Tribeca, New York (September 2002)
  • The Viewing Room, Chelsea Art District, New York (October 2002)
  • September 11 Memorial Exhibition, Ward - Nasse Gallery, New York (September 2003)
  • Untitled group exhibition, Ward - Nasse Gallery, New York - January 2004 -

Personal

  • The Ranch Rd. Fine Art Gallery, Salt Lake City (Spring 2000)
  • The Denise Robarge Gallery, Palm Springs, California (April 2001)
  • The Rio Grande Gallery, Salt Lake City, Utah (March 2002)
  • The Jay Hawkins Gallery, Chelsea Art District, New York (July 2002)[2]
gollark: > One inadequately solved design problem was the need for heavy shielding to protect the crew and those on the ground from acute radiation syndrome; other potential problems included dealing with crashes.[2] ah yes.
gollark: That is not much of an issue. The carbon dioxide production from them is. If we ran out somehow, it would be possible to synthesize more (with energy input, obviously).
gollark: Also, I think there are some nuclear plane concepts? Generally they use the heat from the nuclear stuff directly in some way.
gollark: This is probably far beyond the life expectancy of a plane.
gollark: > And also if you have a kerosene powered plane it will become useless in however many years when a drop of oil costs $100

References

  1. DeFoore, Jay (2002-07-10). "Daniel Arsenault's Randomness On Display". Photo District News. Retrieved 2009-03-24.
  2. "Daniel Arsenault Biography". Watson & Spierman Fine Art. Archived from the original on 2009-03-22. Retrieved 2009-03-24.



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