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Tim Webb Bio
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The photographic journey began for me as a second grader in Clay City, Kentucky, in 1978. My father set up a makeshift darkroom in our living room, and I was amazed as I watched the image of a flooded barn magically appear in the developer tray. That magic eventually turned into a career.I started with newspapers and eventually spent over nine years as the University Photographer at Eastern Kentucky University, in Richmond. As University Photographer, I created images for all of Eastern’s major publications and news service, including the alumni magazine, sports media guides, and brochures — totaling more than 100 publications annually. I left my position at Eastern in January 2004 to devote my efforts full time to Tim Webb Photography.I now specialize as a contract photographer, shooting Editorial, Corporate, and Wedding Photography.In September 2004, Eastern gave me a permanent exhibit in the university library of my What Mankind Left Behind collection. It is a collection of photographs that take an artistic look at some things left lying around from the past in Eastern Kentucky. Also in 2004, I was a guest lecturer for the Department of Communications at Eastern, teaching photojournalism, and I am currently a guest lecturer, teaching Community Education photography classes at Eastern, and I am the photo coach for the photography students at Berea College.I formerly served on the Board of Directors of the University Photographer’s Association of America (UPAA), and I was the Editor of Contact Sheet, the organization’s quarterly journal. I currently serve on the Board of Directors of the Richmond Area Arts Council, and the Advisory Board of The Eastern Progress. I also serve as the official photographer for the Touchstone Energy All-A Classic high school sports tournaments.I graduated from Eastern in 1992 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism. Before returning to my alma mater in 1994, I worked for my hometown newspaper, The Clay City Times, as a reporter/photographer and eventually as news editor. I left The Times in 1994 to become a freelance journalist and photographer, working for various publications, and as a lab assistant for Vickie Miller Photography — a portrait studio and commercial developing lab in Stanton. I also worked as a media consultant for Judge Sara Combs in her election campaigns for the Kentucky Supreme Court in 1993, and Kentucky Court of Appeals in 1994.I first became serious about photography during my senior year at Powell County High School, shooting my first wedding one week after graduation. I went on to become Photo Editor of the The Eastern Progress while I was a student at Eastern, and I served an internship for the Kentucky Press Association in 1992, covering the General Assembly for the state’s weekly newspapers.My wife Natalie and I have three kids, Nolan, 13 Cameron, 10, and a daughter, Laura Kathryn, 7, and we have lived in Richmond, Kentucky since 1994, after spending most of our lives in Powell County. |