National Geographic Channel Production Images

Over the past several months, I had the opportunity to work on several major productions for National Geographic Channel. My role on set was to document production and make portraits. On the television series Years of Living Dangerously, a show that brings celebrity correspondents to the forefront of climate change issues, I worked with Bradley Whitford and Arnold Schwarzenegger on separate occasions in Washington, D.C. National Geographic Channel also produced a documentary film titled Gender Revolution: A Journey with Katie Couric. For this film, I was in Gloucester, Virginia, where I worked with Katie and Gavin Grimm, a transgender teen whose case for a bathroom bill was sent to The Supreme Court.

Photography from National Geographic and Lindblad Expeditions

During the summer and autumn months, I had the privilege of working as a photography expert and instructor with National Geographic Expeditions, Lindblad Expeditions and National Geographic Student Expeditions. Over a seven week period, my journeys included Alaska (Anchorage, Denali and Seward), Scotland (Highlands and Caledonian Canal) and The Canadian Maritimes (Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Gros Morne National Park and Quebec). Above are some images made throughout the expeditions.

Cover Image for Fulbright Annual Report from Iceland

Eric Kruszewski photographs M Jackson at Svinafellsjokull, Iceland.

In the summer of 2015, I had the pleasure of leading a National Geographic Student Expedition to Iceland with M Jackson, a great friend and dedicated climate researcher. While hiking on Svinafellsjokull Glacier, we discovered a moulin, a shaft inside a glacier formed by running water. After descending into the glacier's depths, M looked up to capture its details and colors. The image I made of her at that moment is now on the cover of the Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board Annual Report.

The Lost Flock - Film Preview at Human Rights Campaign

Eric Kruszewski documentary video production about LGBT Catholics in Washington, D.C.

The video series about LGBT Catholics in Baltimore, Maryland was screened at the Human Rights Campaign Headquarters in Washington, D.C. Members from the LGBT community, the Catholic Church and employees of HRC attended. The films were used as a platform for discussion, action and collaboration.

Exhibition at Baltimore Museum of Art - Sondheim Prize

From Wednesday, June 22 through July 31, 2016, my work focusing on LGBT Catholics in Baltimore, a seven-part video series, will be on exhibit at The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA). The exhibition showcases artwork by the seven finalists competing for the Janet & Walter Sondheim Artscape Prize, a $25,000 fellowship given each year to a visual artist living and working in the Greater Baltimore region. The exhibition is held in conjunction with Artscape, America's largest free art festival, and is produced by the Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts. Below are a few photos detailing my exhibit installation, and here is the official press release.