Gregory Hurcomb profile image

Gregory Hurcomb's work engages with fragments, ruins, artifacts, edifices, interaction, technology, media, and slipstreams along the interstices of space and time. His interests collide along the intersection of art, architecture, literature, and design. Imagination and creativity are the fluids that provide the energy, stimulus, motion, and inertia that propels him forward into new discoveries, fields, opportunities, and manifestations. He has exhibited nationally and internationally including at the International Center of Photography in New York City and in Sao Paolo, Brazil. He has most recently been appointed a lecturer at the California College of Art where he will be teaching Radical Representation in the MArch Program and Studio 1 and a course in Visual Digital Media in the BArch Program. He is currently working on amalgamating sound, light, film, and structures into new mediascapes.

Gregory Hurcomb (b. 1977) was born and raised in New York City. He received his Masters in Architecture from The University of Pennsylvania in 2010. He also earned a certificate of General Studies in Photography from the International Center of Photography in New York City in 2000 and a BA from Rutgers University in English Literature in 1999. While at the University of Pennsylvania he was awarded the E. Lewis Dales Traveling Fellowship, an award for excellence in portfolio design and the Donald Prowler Memorial Prize, awarded as a scholarship to graduate students whose work advances the design of sustainable architecture. He has previously taught at the University of Pennsylvania as well as the International Center of Photography.

Lecturer, Architecture

BA, Rutgers University; MArch, University of Pennsylvania

Website: www.gregoryhurcomb.com