Category: Press

  • Wednesday Night Photo Show — The Film Episode

    Wednesday Night Photo Show — The Film Episode

    I recently joined the crew at Dan’s Camera City for their Wednesday Night Photo Show to talk about film photography why it refuses to disappear, why it’s resurging, and how shooting analog continues to shape the way we see and think about images.

    The conversation ranged from process and materials to the slower, more intentional rhythm that film demands, and how those constraints can actually deepen creative choices. It was a relaxed, thoughtful discussion about photography, craft, and rediscovering the tactile joy of working with physical media.

    If you missed it live, the replay is available here:

    https://danscamera.com/wednesday-night-photo-show

    Watch here: Wednesday Night Photo Show: The Film Episode

  • New times, new techniques — Featured in The Morning Call

    New times, new techniques — Featured in The Morning Call

    In April 2020, The Morning Call published a piece by Glenn Koehler about how Lehigh Valley visual artists were adapting their work during the early months of the pandemic—navigating canceled shoots, paused classes, and the constraints of social distancing while still trying to keep making things.

    I was included as one of the local photographers adjusting to that sudden shutdown. The article discusses how commercial work largely stalled, and how I shifted attention inward—digging through archives, rediscovering images to print, and spending time in the darkroom. It also highlights my interest in historical print processes, including palladium printing and carbon printing, and my ongoing effort to combine modern image-making with older, hands-on methods—essentially merging today’s cameras with the printing techniques of the past.

    The story also features other Lehigh Valley photographers and educators finding new ways to stay creative and connected, from remote teaching strategies to experimenting with alternative processes and online resources.

    Source: The Morning Call — “New times, new techniques: Lehigh Valley visual artists are finding creative ways to work” (Glenn Koehler, April 2, 2020)

  • Windows of the Past: Lehigh County — Baum School of Art Exhibition

    Windows of the Past: Lehigh County — Baum School of Art Exhibition

    In October 2019, Lehigh Valley Press featured my exhibition Windows of the Past: Lehigh County, presented in the David E. Rodale Gallery at The Baum School of Art.

    The show brought together 17 images of historic Lehigh County locations, with subjects selected from sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The project was built around an experiment I’d set for myself that year: photographing local architecture and landmarks while exploring how different historic photographic printing processes change the emotional “time signature” of an image.

    The work blended modern capture with older methods. Some images were made digitally, others on film using vintage cameras, and the final prints were produced using a range of traditional processes including cyanotype, tintype, gum bichromate, albumen, silver gelatin, and palladium. One example discussed in the piece describes creating a digital negative from a modern image and then producing an albumen print in the darkroom—mixing contemporary tools with 19th-century chemistry.

    As part of the exhibition, I also offered community programming at the Baum School, including a collaborative cyanotype workshop, along with tintype portrait sittings on select dates during the run of the show.

    Read the original article by Ed Courrier (Lehigh Valley Press): https://www.lvpnews.com/20191025/matthew-blum-windows-in-baum-exhibit-4

  • Billboard — Lehigh Valley Press Review

    Billboard — Lehigh Valley Press Review

    In November 2018, Lehigh Valley Press published a review of the feature film Billboard, written by Paul Willistein.

    Billboard is a Lehigh Valley–shot comedy inspired by the real-life “billboard sitters” radio promotion contest from the early 1980s. The film reimagines that local media spectacle through a fictional radio station storyline, using humor to poke at attention economics, hype, and the strange feedback loop between an audience and the machine trying to entertain it.

    I served as Director of Photography on Billboard, and the review specifically called out the cinematography for supporting the film’s mix of exterior and interior scenes across the region.

    Read the original Lehigh Valley Press review:

    https://www.lvpnews.com/20181104/movie-review-billboard-lampoons-radio-station-stunt-8

  • Lehigh Valley with Love Podcast — Episode 031

    Lehigh Valley with Love Podcast — Episode 031

    I was a guest on Episode 031 of the Lehigh Valley with Love Podcast, where I joined hosts Tyler and George for a wide-ranging conversation about photography, videography, and filmmaking in the Lehigh Valley.

    The episode focused in part on my role as director of photography for Billboard, a locally produced narrative film that premiered in Allentown on November 1. We also talked about creative process, working behind the camera, and the intersections between still photography, motion, and storytelling.

  • Art in the Park | 2018

    Art in the Park | 2018

    In 2018, Art in the Park featured a special attraction as Matthew Blum, delivered a live ambrotype process demonstration. Amidst the event’s verdant backdrop, Blum masterfully crafted glass plate portraits, channeling the historic essence of this 19th-century art form. His demonstration offered visitors a fascinating window into the precision and artistry of wet plate photography, merging the past’s allure with the present’s appreciation for timeless craftsmanship.