Alongside my creative practice—and often informing it—is my professional specialization in image archiving & digitization, with a particular interest in ephemera and obsolete media. Below are select projects I’ve had the honor of executing. For a more in-depth list or to inquire about imaging/digitization services, please contact me.

Carla Stellweg Archives

Digitized the complete set [30 issues] of Artes Visuales (1973-1981), the first bilingual, contemporary visual arts magazine published in Latin America by the Museum of Modern Art in Mexico City, co-founded and edited by Carla Stellweg.

Catalogued 150+ pieces of ephemera, artist’s books, mail art, rare portfolios, prints, magazines, and documents, which were presented to and acquired by MoMA for several of its departmental collections to expand its Latin American and Latinx holdings.

The Estate of Peter Moore

Digitized, edited, and archived 500+ 35mm slides of photographs by Peter Moore—mostly never-before-seen—for a forthcoming monograph by Barbara Moore.

School of Visual Arts Archives

Digitized over 10 boxes of slides, photographs, transparencies, and documents donated to the SVA Archives as part of the Steven Heller Collection.

Scanned and retouched 180+ images from the iconic SVA Subway Posters (1947 – Present) Collection.

Cataloged over 8,500 scans of artworks into the Library’s digital image collection, filling in gaps with hundreds of works specifically by artists who have historically been underrepresented.

Collection of James B. Morefield

A personal project undertaken after unearthing 30+ carousels of 35mm slides in my grandparents’ basement, all containing photos my grandfather took in the mid-60s, revealing a passion he once had for photography that was completely unbeknownst to me. He hadn’t seen these images since they were taken, so I decided to digitize a selection of 100+ slides to bring them back into light. While scanning, I quickly drew a parallel between his eye and mine through the lens of a camera, inspiring my series Now and Then, wherein I paired similar photos we took decades apart.