Scott Griswold, Jr. is the son and namesake of a famous portrait painter. Scott Jr. forsook a career as a classical pianist to pursue fine art photography. Griswold taught himself the Zone System, a technique made famous by legendary pictorialst, Ansel Adams, with whom Scott Griswold exhibited in 1980.
Having customized his technique by age twenty-seven, Griswold's fine art photography drew the admiration of collectors and art galleries across the United States. During an appearance as an expert lecturer in Washington, DC, the young master caught the attention of Kodak representatives who initiated what was to become a long, professional association as mentor and consultant to executives in Eastman's Professional Division. Griswold grew to become a world renowned fine art photographer. Reproduction rights to his images command tens of thousands of dollars.
Driven to seek new challenges and discover more precise ways to convey his unique view of the world, Scott Griswold, Jr. has developed a hybrid form of art he calls Digital Painting. This artform is based upon his thrilling, original, photographic images. Finalized work is then painstakingly reproduced using a process known as "GICLEE". This new process is more precise than traditional offset lighography and costlier to employ. However, the resulting reproductions contain colors and a richness of tone which are simply unavailable through any other process.
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