James Gossard is an award winning Maryland film producer & director, poet, and playwright. He is also a screenwriter and fiction writer. His current project, DIVINE INSTINCT, a feature-length documentary about sculptor Gary Spinosa, was a 2023 Finalist in the Washington DC Independent Film Festival where it screened its World Premiere on March 1, 2023. Gossard worked as a freelance journalist in Montana, following the Border Grizzly Project and writing for wildlife journals. StoryPros named his screenplay, WHITE DUST, in its Top Ten Action-Thrillers.
Zoë Lintzeris is a visual artist specializing in painting and photography, and a certified Arts in Health specialist. Founded on her previous work in journalism and research, her art practice explores the human psyche within urban and rural environments. Love, loss and resistance are key themes in her work, which has been showcased on feature shoot, The Stuttering Foundation, LED Baltimore, and more. In 2022, she marked her first solo show of works on canvas in Baltimore, and showcased her third photo series and solo show, "The Maskyoulinity Project”, in New York City in 2019.
Mike Byson is half tigerbison, half man. His tigerbison half is elusive but pops up around town sometimes. He has been seen flying, grazing, and playing basketball.
Howard has been a professional photographer for over 40 years and have worked out of his own studio, Studio H, for the last 35. He originally came to Baltimore from New York to study at Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA), where he graduated with a Master of Fine Arts degree. His award-winning work involves layering and collaging of images—both in film and digital. A very early adopter of digital, Howard was a beta tester for Photoshop and coauthored a book on Photoshop—Photoshop 4 Complete.
Though based in Annapolis, Maryland, I travel for about 3 months per year and have been to over 50 countries; my photography is closely linked to my travels. I've had a lot of opportunities to exercise my interest by virtue of having lived in both the Netherlands and Hawaii, both exceptionally photogenic places. In my travels I try to capture a sense of place as well those evocative moments that form our strongest memories, from landscapes to candid street portraits. Travel photography of this sort has multiple goals: a documentary one and an emotional one.
Kim Keller is a DC-area photographer focused on street photography, public events, area traditions, and communal celebrations. She has held private shows at the Abington Art Center (Jenkintown, PA), Links Bridge Vineyard (Thurmont, MD), and Lyceum Gallery (Sandy Spring, MD). Kim has participated in group exhibits across the U.S.