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Kyle Cassidy

Kyle Cassidy
Kyle Cassidy mojave.jpg
Cassidy in the Mojave desert
Born (1966-10-31) October 31, 1966 (age 50)
Woodbury, New Jersey
Occupation Author, photographer
Notable credit(s) Armed America: Portraits of Gun Owners in Their Homes
Website www.kylecassidy.com

Kyle Cassidy (born October 31, 1966 in Woodbury, New Jersey) is an American photographer and videographer who lives in West Philadelphia. He holds a BA in English from Rowan University, and also holds an MCSE. He is the author of the book Armed America: Portraits of Gun Owners in Their Homes.

In 1993 Cassidy wrote Saturn: A Beginners Guide to Using the Internet, followed by Stickman's Way Cool Guide to Network Wizardry.

Cassidy published two additional technology books, The Concise Guide to Enterprise Internetworking and Security and Introduction to Windows 2000 Network Administration. He co-wrote the paper "Can You Trust Your Email?" in 1993, warning of a flaw in the used to deliver email, which could allow information to be forged.

Cassidy's "Photo-a-Week" project lets viewers into his life on a weekly basis starting on January 1, 2000.

His photographic style involves flights of fancy and a sense of humor. Laws of nature are applied inconsistently; people and objects are often levitating, and non sequiturs, whimsy, and cryptozoological intrusions are common. "I think the world in my photographs is a lot darker in many ways than the real world that people insulate themselves in, but it's also a lot funnier. My world is malevolent but humorous, as opposed to the real world which is malevolent and relentless, but is often packaged in a friendly box and rabbit ears," he said in a 2004 interview with A.D. Amorosi in the October issue of Art Matters. His images often explore themes of "truth" and "fiction". This culminated in his July 2006 show "Lies" at the Sol gallery in Philadelphia. "Photography," he says in the artist's statement for that show "is about lies just as much as it is about the truth."

His work with cutters and homeless orphans presaged his 2004 fascination with American gun owners which led to the book, Armed America: Portraits of Gun Owners in Their Homes, which provided a view into the lives of a controversial culture, praised by advocates of both gun control and gun ownership. It was named by Amazon as both one of the ten best art books of 2007, and as one of the 100 best books of 2007.

Cassidy's approach to shooting portraits has resulted in book covers and album art. His portraits are often shot in context but in the early days of Occupy Wall Street he set up mini-portrait studios at both the NYC and Philly protests, to remove the context and focus on the individuality of the people attending. The photos were published at the Huffington Post, and he hung a show of the Occupy shots at the Bluestocking Gallery in Manhattan. In another project, he took photographs of the scientists responsible for the discoveries of the New Horizons probe.


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