Terry deRoy Gruber | |
---|---|
Alma mater | Vassar College |
Occupation | Photographer |
Notable work | Working Cats Fat Cats Cat High: The Yearbook |
Terry deRoy Gruber is an American photographer, author and filmmaker.
Early life
Terry Gruber’s mother, Aaronel deRoy Gruber, was a professional artist. Growing up in Pittsburgh Pa., Gruber attended Vassar College, during its second year of coeducation where he served as an editor-in-chief of The Vassarion, the college’s yearbook. His position on the yearbook became national news when his freedom of speech was censored in 1975 by the College, before becoming reinstated.
Photography career
Terry Gruber is the founder of Gruber Photographers Inc, where he is leader of a team of photographers, and works in fine arts photography. Gruber also works as a banquet photographer and wedding photographer, and has served as the photographer for the weddings of public figures such as Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones; and Billy Joel and Katie Lee. The Bridal Council stated that Gruber was “one of the first reportage photographers to bring a fashionable, spirited eye to the … world of wedding photography”. Magazines that have published his photos include Vogue, Town & Country, and Vanity Fair. He has also commented on trends in wedding photography in articles for newspapers including the New York Times.
In 2022 his work was shown as a part of the "2022 Alternative Processes" exhibition at the Soho Gallery. He often works with traditional banquet photography cameras original to the 1920s, made by the company Folmer and Schwing. Specifically, he told PetaPixel in 2022 that "For an indoor shot, I have a 14-inch (~350mm) and 16-inch (~400mm) threaded lens with a Packard shutter with a lemon which is an air squeeze black bulb ... For an outdoor shot with flashbulbs for fill light, I use a lens with a shutter — a 14-inch Goerz Dagor with a Copal shutter."
Film career
As a filmmaker, his 1989 work Not Just Any Flower, made under thesis advisor Martin Scorsese while attending Columbia Film School, is in the permanent film collection of the MoMA in New York and won a Student Emmy Award for Best Comedy. In 1990 he worked as the still photographer on the film Men of Respect.
Books
Books of photographs by Gruber include Working Cats (1979), Fat Cats (1981), and Cat High: The Yearbook (1984). Working Cats features cats who live in working environments, that were recruited from local owners for the book. Using his past experience with yearbooks Gruber created Cat High in 1984 as Paw Prints, the yearbook of a cat high school in Paw Paw, a spoof on yearbooks that had senior cats (and one dog) pose as graduates with mortarboards and other outfits. The title was re-released by Chronicle Books in 2015. His book Getting Married, 30 black and white postcards was published in 1996 by Merckendorf & Beamer.
References
- "My View: DeRoy Just Doesn't Mean Broadway Openings". Times Square Chronicles. 9 May 2016.
- "Removal of Yearbook's Editor Spurs Vassar Demonstration". 3 April 1975 – via NYTimes.com.
- ^ "Pet Tales: The Cat Yearbook from Paw Paw High". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
- ^ "Terry de Roy Gruber". old.post-gazette.com.
- Mallozzi, Vincent M. (21 October 2011). "Banquet Photos Put Everyone in the Picture - Field Notes" – via NYTimes.com.
- Levine, Alexandra S. (25 January 2016). "New York Weddings Blanketed in White" – via NYTimes.com.
- Yara, Susan. "Wed Like A Celeb". Forbes.
- "10 Questions with Photographer, Terry Gruber". The Bridal Council.
- Brady, Lois Smith (2003-11-23). "For Gay Couples, New Rituals at the Altar". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-05-12.
- "2022 Alternative Processes Competition Winners, Juror Ann Jastrab | Soho Photo Gallery". Retrieved 2023-05-12.
- Mistry, Phil (2022-07-03). "Banquet Camera: The Early-1900s Tool for Photographing Large Groups". PetaPixel. Retrieved 2023-05-12.
- "Terry deRoy Gruber - MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art.
- "Terry DeRoy Gruber". IMDb.
- "Terry DeRoy Gruber". IMDb. Retrieved 2023-05-12.
- "Cat books". Vol. 6. American Photographer. 1981. p. 244.
- Erickson, Christine. "In the '80s, they put cat heads on human bodies without Photoshop". Mashable.