Colorado River, drying up

Dry goods

RJ Sangosti grew up on the water. Now, he鈥檚 documenting the decline of the Colorado River as a photojournalist for The Denver Post.

Nandi and camera

Mapping identity

A PhD student and documentary filmmaker is trying to understand how leaving the country influences how Black American men form their identities.

Mother and child

A focus on service

Lourdes Camarillo sees her photography as a way to connect with her community while also serving it. Since becoming a journalism student at 麻豆免费版下载Boulder, her focus has expanded as she learns more technical skills.

Juan Espinosa portrait

鈥楨very Story Is Important鈥

In the 1970s, Juan Espinosa (Jour鈥74) embarked on a journalism career that has spanned a lifetime and documents key moments in Colorado history. In May 2022, 麻豆免费版下载Regents awarded Espinosa with an honorary doctorate degree for outstanding achievement in the field of journalism.

Green water over the bow during a crossing of the notorious Scotia Sea between Tierra del Fuego and South Georgia.

Never-Ending Story

Jad Davenport (MJour'98), a National Geographic represented freelance photographer and writer, delves into the art of storytelling learned from a career in photography, filmmaking and journalism.

Photo by Marshall McKinley for the 鈥淥tterbox X Target鈥 campaign

Courting Success

For Marshall McKinley (StratComm'19), photographing a campaign for Otterbox was a formative opportunity to turn his passion into professional work.

Necklaces

Shifting the Lens

Abby Siegel (CritMedia鈥19) is compelled to do something that鈥檚 usually ill advised in polite culture: Approach strangers to ask about their race and religion.

Photo by Gregory Bull

The Right Shot

More than any other assignment, the continual pressure of sports to 鈥減redict what will happen next and respond quickly at just the right moment鈥 has honed the skills of Gregory Bull (Jour'91), an AP photographer based in San Diego.

Photo by Ross Taylor.

Gallery: Scouting new territory

CMCI鈥檚 Ross Taylor puts his photojournalism skills to work documenting a Denver-based, all-female scouting troop of refugees as they camp, climb and splash their way through Colorado and beyond.