|
Greg Halvorsen Schreck, M.A.Associate Professor of Art
On Faculty since 1989
|
Greg Halvorsen Schreck is an artist, a photographer, sometimes using video, always a baseball fan. Greg started making photographs when he was 16. Before the digital revolution he worked with film in the darkroom. He enjoys collaborating with others from time to time: designers, church and community groups, and with physicist Mark Woodworth on theoretical, optical possibilities. His projects are connected to his Christian faith: portraiture, landscapes, indigenous, human rights, and environmental issues, and digital experimentation. His most recent exhibition in 2018, included photographs and video installations reflecting the months he spent in Guatemala with the Quiche Maya, and with Innerchange, a Christian mission to the poor.
Schreck has been teaching analog and digital photography, and other art classes at Wheaton College for thirty years. His undergraduate degree is from Rochester Institute of Technology where he studied both commercial and fine art photography. Schreck completed his graduate work at New York University and the International Center of Photography. He lives in Wheaton, Illinois with his family. His favorite color is blue. He has a peculiar sense of humor.
New York University and the International Center of Photography
M.A., Photographic Studies
Rochester Institute of Technology
B.F.A., Commercial and Fine Art Photography
- Digital Photography
- Analog Photography
- Documentary Photography
- Art and Technology
- Vocations in Art
- Art in the Church / Art and Christian Faith
- Andrei Tarkovsky, Russian Filmmaker
- John Berger, Art Historian, Novelist, Essayist
The Coachella Review - Article on Lambertian Photographs
Art and Theology - Article on Via Dolorosa video collaboration
- Digital Photography I
- Digital Photography II
- Taking Pictures
- Film and Darkroom Photography
- Documentary Photography
- Studio Photography
- Landscape Photography
- Sophomore Cornerstone
- Photography in Italy (Gordon College, Orvieto Program)
- Photography in Argentina
- HNGR Independent Study Projects in South Africa, Tanzania, Kenya, Mozambique, Sierra Leone, Uganda, India, Honduras, and Peru
- Art and Technology
- Videofilm
- Film Theory
- Film Production
- Taking Pictures
Via Dolorosa: The Way of Sorrow | My class and I collaborated with international torture survivors for years. Their faces transformed my Holy Week worship, walking towards the cross. Jesus suffers in solidarity with everyone who suffers. I made each photo with friends and family, a contemporary, personal interpretation. Jeremy Botts made the abstract icons in response.
Lambertian Photographs | Mark Woodworth and I developed a process to make photographs, each machined out of 96 pieces of wood. Mark’s code is based on Lambert’s Law, an equation from 1760. The photographs are unique, made from light and shadow raking across a contoured surface without pigments, projections, or emulsion.
The Swimming Pool in Paris, for John Berger | In 2013, our department hosted the biannual CIVA (Christians in the Visual Arts) conference, JustArt: On Justice and Art. I showed this film at the conference, inspired by a story by John Berger about a Cambodian refugee. Berger, an art historian, is an important prophetic voice on justice. He died in 2017.