|
As provided by the artist:
Mr. Liepke was born and raised in St. Louis Park
Minnesota. After finishing high school he enrolled at the
University of Minnesota in order to study art history. In
1979 he moved from Minneapolis to Los Angeles California,
attending the Art Center College of Design as a photography
major.
Upon completion of his college education he opened an
advertising photography studio in Los Angeles. For many
years during that time his client roster included prominent
agencies such as Chiat/Day, Daily &Assoc, J Walter Thompson
etc., while photographing products for American Honda,
Sunkist, FTD, to name a few.
In 1987 a major earthquake hit the LA metropolitan area
causing considerable damage to Mr. Liepke’s building and
studio. The building needed considerable repair, so it was
at that time Mr. Liepke decided to close his LA based studio
and make a radical change in his life. In one bold stroke he
decided to move to New York City, and in 1988 started from
scratch, this time instead of a product photographer,
reinventing himself as a fine art portraitist.
A major turning point and opportunity came when legendary
CBS News journalist Walter Cronkite granted Liepke a private
portrait session, after many months of requests, and letter
writing on the part of Mr.Liepke. Mr.Cronkite was in turn so
pleased with the resulting portrait from that session, that
the image went on to grace the cover of his biography “ A
Reporters Life” a 32 week New York Times best seller
published by Alfred Knopf. The photograph also then spawned
additional portrait sittings with many other celebrities and
journalists. His first solo exhibition was held in 1997 at
The Museum of Television and Radio in New York.
Presently, Mr. Liepke resides in upstate New York with his
wife, and two sons. He continues to draw upon his own
wonderful childhood growing up in Minnesota for the
inspiration, and subject matter contained within his fine
art work. While at the same time producing finely crafted
prints with paper negatives, he enjoys using early turn of
the century alternative printing processes for his medium
such as Bromoil, Platinum Palladium, and Gum Bichromate.
His commercial work today still includes portraits. Many
book covers now utilize his fine art images such as Simon &
Schuster, Knopf, Bantam Doubleday, and Penguin books. Both
his fine art and commercial work have been profiled often in
PHOTOGRAPHIS, GRAPHIS Showcase, Photo District News, Town &
Country magazine, and numerous others.
Growing up in St. Louis Park, Peter Liepke lived at 3901
Alabama Ave.
|