About

An elderly man wearing a flat cap and a light blue sweater sits outdoors in a forested area, with a camera strap around his neck.

Photographic artist, teacher and consultant, Stanley Goldberg, lives and works in New York City. 

It was his Uncle Babe who, by gifting him a camera at the age of 13, launched a life-long engagement with the camera. Mr. Goldberg went on to receive a major part of his education with the photographic master Minor White. The Epsten Gallery has twice presented Mr. Goldberg’s photographs: most recently with “Carscapes” (2017), and the first “Fragile Moments” (2012), subsequently acquired by the Center for Healing Arts at the Truman Medical Center, KC, MO. “silently, a bloom…” was the 2016 exhibition of his work at Sherry Leedy Contemporary Art, and is the subject of a short documentary film by Richard Daniels. Mr. Goldberg has taught Film Design at the Rhode Island School of Design and directed the Leonard Institute of New Media in Cologne, Germany. In addition to having his work among many private collections, he has also created works for major museums such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art (NYC), The Boston Museum of Fine Art, and The Bishop Museum of Honolulu, HI. Mr. Goldberg also possesses Broadway credits, known as a pioneer of projected scenic design for the musicals “The Me Nobody Knows” and “Over Here, with the Andrews Sisters.” In addition, Mr. Goldberg is the author of the award-winning children’s book, “The Adventures of Stanley Kane.”

Close-up of a flower image with a certificate beside it. The certificate is from The Art League, recognizing an individual for an honorable mention in a photography competition themed "Superstition & Belief.
Stanley Goldberg Photography