Cart Search
submit Remember my login

Looking for a chapter event?

Past SPE Annual Conferences

Ashley Kauschinger

Ashley
Kauschinger

SPE Member since 2011
Member Chapter: Southeast

Ashley Kauschinger

SPE member since 2011
Temporary Worlds
Archival Pigment Print

Ashley Kauschinger

SPE member since 2011
Echo
Archival Pigment Print

Ashley Kauschinger

SPE member since 2011
The Crossing
Archival Pigment Print

Ashley Kauschinger

SPE member since 2011
Morning Ritual
Archival Pigment Print

Ashley Kauschinger

SPE member since 2011
Objects of Ancestry
Archival Pigment Print

Ashley Kauschinger

SPE member since 2011
Inverted
Archival Pigment Print

Ashley Kauschinger

SPE member since 2011
Family Anthology
Archival Pigment Print

Ashley Kauschinger

SPE member since 2011
Silt
Archival Pigment Print

Ashley Kauschinger

SPE member since 2011
Bitter Hair
Archival Pigment Print

Ashley Kauschinger

SPE member since 2011
She-Wolf
Archival Pigment Print

about

Ashley Kauschinger is an interdisciplinary artist living and working in Atlanta, GA. Her work explores identity, time, and material. She is currently an Assistant Professor of Art at Georgia Gwinnett College.

She received her BFA from Savannah College of Art and Design and her MFA from Texas Woman's University. Her work has traveled internationally and is in the collections of Vanderbilt University and Sir Elton John.

​Ashley has previously taught Photography and Curatorial Studies at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, the University of South Carolina, and Maine Media Workshops + College, among others.

In addition to being an artist and educator, Ashley is also an independent curator and community member. She has collaborated on projects with the Atlanta Center for Photography, Lenscratch, The Light Factory Photo Arts Center, MINT, Swan Coach House, and more. From 2012 to 2019, she founded and ran the online photography magazine Light Leaked.

Email Sign Up

SPE email updates contain resources, news, and more!

About this piece

Comments about this piece

Dialogue and critique are important to the SPE mission.
Please join the conversation.

Exit Full Screen Mode