American photographer (born 1947)
Lucinda Devlin
Born 1947 (age 77–78) Nationality American Occupation Photographer
Lucinda Devlin (born 1947) is an American photographer. Devlin lives and works in Greensboro, North Carolina .[ 1]
Her mid-2000s project Field Culture documented American crop farming.[ 2] In her series The Omega Suites , she documented execution chambers across the United States.[ 3] [ 4] [ 5]
Her work is included in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts Houston ,[ 6] the Whitney Museum of American Art ,[ 7] and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art .[ 8]
References
^ DeCwikiel-Kane, Dawn (26 January 2017). "Internationally known photographer Lucinda Devlin makes Greensboro her home" . Greensboro News and Record .
^ Booker, Maia (23 April 2014). "The Haunting Beauty of Farm Technology" . The New Republic .
^ Lopez, Robert (March 2017). "Sightlines highlights Lucinda Devlin's color photography" . YES! Weekly .
^ "Lucinda Devlin: Sightlines | George Eastman Museum" . www.eastman.org .
^ Rafferty, Rebecca. "Portraits of places" . CITY News .
^ "Lucinda Devlin: Electric Chair from Witness Room, Diagnostic and Processing Center, Jackson, Georgia" . mfah.org .
^ "Lucinda Devlin" . whitney.org .
^ "Lethal Injection Chamber from Family Witness Room, Parchman State Penitentiary, Parchman, Mississippi, 1998" . SFMOMA .
International National Artists People