Bio
David Feigenbaum’s photographs reveal his interest in the contradictions of daily life—public and private, old and new, static and active, populated and empty. Recent bodies of work include “Good Morning, Sun—the urban landscape illuminated and revealed.” and “A Conversation with Albert Fitch Bellows, 19th-century genre and landscape painter.”
His work has been exhibited at the Sanborn House Historical and Cultural Center, Winchester, and will be shown in a March 2014 Photography Atelier exhibition at the Griffin Museum of Photography, Winchester, MA. His photographs appear in Paradise Planned: The Garden Suburb and the Modern City, by Robert A.M. Stern, et al. (Monacelli Press, 2013) and a forthcoming book by architectural historian, Maureen Meister.
Born and raised in Pittsburgh and educated at Yale (where his classes included studio art and art history) and Harvard Law School, Feigenbaum is a patent lawyer at Fish & Richardson. He also is a board member of From the Top, the National Public Radio show that celebrates extraordinarily talented young classical musicians. He has studied advanced photography with Steve Dunwell and portfolio development with Karen Davis in the Photography Atelier, both at the Griffin Museum of Photography.