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Loren Rex Cameron (born August 28, 1959) is an American photographer, author and transsexual activist. His work includes portraiture and self-portraiture which consist transsexual bodies in both clothed and nude form. Cameron's photography captures images of the transsexual body. In an early review of Cameron's work, The Advocate said he was deserving of "high praise not only for compelling quality of his black-and-white images but for their sensitivity as well."

Biography
Loren Rex Cameron was born in Pasadena, California on August 28, 1959. He moved to rural Arkansas in 1969 after his mother's death, where he lived as a self-described tomboy on his father's farm. By the age of 16, Cameron identified both sexually and socially as a lesbian and encountered homophobic hostility in the small town where he lived. At this time, Cameron quit school and left his home to travel the country seeking work as a construction laborer and other blue collar employment. In 1979, he moved to the San Francisco Bay Area where he identified socially with the lesbian community until the age of 26, when he confronted his dissatisfaction with the female body with which he was born. Cameron's interest in photography coincided with the beginning of his physical changes as he documented his own physiological transition from female to male at this time. Despite his lack of formal training, beginning in 1993 Cameron studied the rudiments of photography and began to photograph the transsexual community. Since 1994, he has given lectures on his work at universities, educational conferences and art institutes. By 1995, Cameron's photographs had been shown in solo exhibitions in San Francisco, Minneapolis, a* and Los Angeles.

Career
Cameron's photography and writing was first published by Cleis Press in 1996. His first published works (Body Alchemy: Transsexual Portraits and Man Tool: The Nuts and Bolts of Female-to-Male Surgery) consists largely of self-portraits, FTM body modifications, and portraits of other female to male transsexuals. Body Alchemy documented Cameron's personal experience of transition from female to male, his life as a man, and the everyday lives of transmen he knew. In many of his self portraits, he includes the shutter-release bulb that he used to take the photograph. The choice to work alone and feature the bulb serves as a commentary on the self-made aspect of being transsexual. Body Alchemy was received with much positive acclaim and became a double 1996 Lambda Literary Award winner. It remains his most well-known work to date, though he has since published other photographic works. More recently published work is a diverse and unprecedented representation of both female and male transsexuals, portraits and classical nudes (Body Photographs by Loren Cameron Volume 1 and 2, and Cameron Correspondence 1997-2003, Taller Experimental Cuerpos Pintados 2003).

Cameron's images have been exhibited in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, in Santiago, Chile, Buenos Aires, Argentina, Sao Paulo, Brazil, and in Mexico City, Mexico. They have been published in numerous books such as Transgender Warriors (Leslie Feinberg, 1996) and Constructing Masculinity: Discussions in Contemporary Culture (Routledge, 1995), as well as in various magazines.[third-party source needed] He has also posed for photographers such as Daniel Nicoletta, Amy Arbus, and Howard Shatz.

Cameron lectures throughout the United States at universities and other venues, including Smith College, Harvard, Cornell, Brown, the University of California at Berkeley, Penn State, and at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. In May 2008, Cameron presented his work at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris. On television, he has been profiled on the Discovery Health Channel's LGBT-themed one-hour special Sex Change: Him to Her, on the National Geographic Channel's "Taboo" Sexual Identity" series. He has also been interviewed in the magazine, The New Yorker.[third-party source needed] Cameron's photographs document the lives and bodies of both transsexual men and women, providing positive, beautiful images of transgender people.

Books

 * Body Alchemy: Transsexual Portraits. 1996, Cleis Press. ISBN 978-1-57344-062-2.


 * Cuerpos fotografiados por Cameron: fotografías. Volume 1. 2009, Taller Experimental Cuerpos Pintados. ISBN 978-9-56295-058-9.
 * Cuerpos fotografiados por Cameron: fotografías. Volume 2. 2009, Taller Experimental Cuerpos Pintados. ISBN  978-9-56295-063-3.
 * Man Tool: The Nuts and Bolts of Female-to-Male Surgery, 2001, Zero eBooks. NO ISBN
 * Cameron Correspondence 1997-2001 Volume 3. 2003, Taller Experimental Cuerpos Pintados. NO ISBN

Selected films

 * The BBC Channel 4 - Television documentary segment about photographer with photos 1995.
 * SBTV Brazil - Television news segment profiling artist, with photo usages 1997.
 * Globo TV Brazil - Television news segment about artist with photo usages 1997.
 * TV Japan - Television news segment profiling artist and photographs 1997.
 * You Don’t Know Dick: Courageous Hearts of Transsexual Men - Northern Light Productions (documentary for film and television profiling artist, contracting photographic usages, 1997).
 * 60 Minutes - Television news segment about artist’s exhibition/artist in residency at UC Santa Cruz, CA. 1998.
 * Boys Don’t Cry - Kimberly Peirce (the feature film lists acknowledgment to Body Alchemy in film credits as Loren Cameron, 1999).
 * Sex Files III (Sexual Secrets) - Exploration Production Inc. for Discovery Channel (television documentary profiling Body Alchemy, Man Tool, and image usages, 2002).
 * Sex Change: Him to Her - Beyond Productions Inc. for Discovery Health Channel (television documentary profiling artist in segment, photograph usages, 2005).
 * Boy I Am - Sam Feder Productions (documentary profiling Body Alchemy, and photo usages, 2006).
 * Taboo - "Sexual Identity", Beyond Productions Inc. for National Geographic Channel (documentary profiling artist in segment, including image usages, 2006).

Impact
Cameron's work is controversial among critics. Many praise his photographs as compelling and informative, while others criticize it for being sexually explicit.

In 2012, The University of Minnesota-Duluth invited Loren Cameron to campus to present his photography. The University paid Cameron $4,000 from student services to cover his speaker’s fee and travel expenses. This decision was met with backlash, due to him and his subjects' identity as transsexual individuals, as well as the nudity in Cameron’s work. Despite the objections, Cameron delivered his presentation on September 26, 2012.

Body Alchemy is considered by some to be influential for bringing attention to the social and medical issues that transsexual people face.

Awards, honors, and recognitions

 * Lambda Literary Award, 1996 [citation needed] HE DIDN'T WIN THIS YEAR
 * Lambda Literary Award, Inaugural Transgender Category, 1997
 * Lambda Literary Award, Small Press Category, 1997
 * Lambda Literary Award Nominee, Best Photography Category, 1997
 * Inaugural Pride Award FTM Intl., 1997 [citation needed] CANT FIND CITATION

References notes:

Archive w/ biographical info

Loren Cameron's book containing biographical info, as well as some of the awards

Review of Body Alchemy: Transsexual Portraits

Source for 1996 Lambda Literary Awards

Includes analysis of Cameron's work

Controversy over Cameron talk at Minnesota University (Positive tone towards Cameron)

Controversy over Cameron talk at Minnesota University (Negative tone towards Cameron)

Minnesota University