BIOGRAPHY
Lee Muslin has been a fine art photographer for over 30 years and in 1995 began exploring the possibilities of digital imaging. Originally she studied studio fine arts, but gravitated towards and stayed with photography throughout the years. Digital imaging has brought her back to her fine arts roots with the creation of images in the computer. These photomontages evolve as she layers, blends and combines her original photographs.
Ms. Muslin has participated in many exhibitions throughout the United States as well as several other countries. She had 2 solo exhibitions in 2005 at Franklin 54 Gallery and the Ansonia Window Show, both in New York City. In 2004, she had two solo exhibitions at Mercer Management Consulting and Manhattan Theatre Resource also in New York City. Some of her group show venues include the Museum of Modern Art, Cork Gallery at Lincoln Center, Soho Photo Gallery, Printmaking Council of New Jersey and the Salmagundi Club. Ms. Muslin had three of her digital images exhibited at the Bergen Museum in Diving into Digital in the Spring of 2006. Another digital image was selected to be part of a surrealism show, Brave Destiny, at the Williamsburg Art & Historical Center. Other digital images have been accepted into Inspired by the Land at the Attleboro Museum in Massachusetts and the Beecher Center for technology in the arts at the Butler Institute of American Art in Ohio in 2003 where she won a third prize award.
As one of ten finalists in Gallery Print’s 2002 Botanical Photography Awards, Ms. Muslin exhibited at the La Quinta Cultural Center in Albuquerque, NM. She won Second Prize in the Professional Women Photographers' Cow Quest Contest where the panel of jurors included Jodi Kwan, Deputy Photo Editor of the New York Times Magazine and Michele McNally, Picture Editor for Fortune Magazine. The Washington Square Outdoor Art Exhibit gave Ms. Muslin five awards over 3 years including first prize for photography. She also won first prize for photography at the Corn Hill Arts Festival in Rochester, NY. From the Museum of Computer Art she won third prize in the Enhanced Photography category in 2001.


