A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Z
Margaret Gabel, BA, Duke U.; award-winning writer, former children's book editor; author of Sparrows Don't Drop Candy Wrappers; short stories published in The Carolina Quarterly and Intro 1.
Henry Gaffney, has written with and for Roberta Flack, The Pointer Sisters, The Four Tops, Stephanie Mills, Judy Collins, and Glen Campbell, and for film and TV; has released two solo albums.
Peter Garfield, BA, Dartmouth College, Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts (Paris); artist working in photography, video, and sculpture; recent solo shows at Feigen Contemporary, Art & Public (Geneva), and Pierogi 2000 (Brooklyn); group shows at Kabinet (Bern), SF Museum of Modern Art; awards from the NEA, NYFA, Albee Foundation, MacDowell, and Yaddo.
Evangelina Garrido, MA, Columbia U.; teaches Spanish at Rutgers U.; teaches modern and American history at Essex County College; has taught Spanish at Montclair State U., Pace U., and Seton Hall U. and ESL at Essex County College.
Thom Garvey, MFA, UNC-Chapel Hill; actor; has performed on the New York stage, on TV, and in films; dialect coach for theater productions; teaches speech at NYU and Baruch College.
Joshua A. Gaylord, PhD, NYU; currently teaches at Ramaz School; co-editor of A Tour of the Darkling Plain: The Letters of Thornton Wilder and Adaline Glasheen; has written on William Faulkner, postmodernism, and narrative theory.
Gerry Geddes, more than 30 years in theater and cabaret; award-winning director and writer, working with such artists as Helen Baldassare, Andre de Shields, and Darius de Haas; revues include Monday In The Dark With George, Put On Your Saturday Suit, and It's A Musical World (A Celebration of Leslie Bricusse).
Joseph Gibaldi, PhD, NYU; director of Acquisitions & Development, Publications Div., MLA; author of Anatomy of the Novella, Approaches to Teaching Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, Teaching Literature & Other Arts, and MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers.
Robert Gilbert, PhD; one of the country's top motivational speakers and speaking coaches; edits Bits & Pieces: The Magazine that Motivates the World; on the faculty of Montclair State U.
Michael Boyce Gillespie, PhD candidate, NYU: has taught at Duke U., NYU, and Queens College; currently completing dissertation on aesthetics, race, and American film.
Richard M. Glavin, professional chef; has worked in many fine restaurants and private clubs in Washington, D.C., and New York; former chairman of Culinary Arts, New York Restaurant School; founding member, Culinary Historians of New York.
Blake Goble, MA, Columbia U.; architect; work includes residential, commercial, institutional, and conceptual projects; worked at Emilio Ambasz & Assoc., Stamberg Aferiat Architecture, Bausman Gill Assocs., and Rafael Vinoly, PC, prior to founding his own firm; design critic at Columbia U. and NYIT.
Joyce Gold, MA, NYU; publications include From Windmills to the World Trade Center: A Walking Guide through Lower Manhattan History and From Trout Stream to Bohemia: A Walking Guide through Greenwich Village History; contributor to the Encyclopedia of New York City.
Gary A. Goldberg, MA, and Certif in Food & Beverage Mgmt., NYU; executive director, New School Culinary Arts program; international food and restaurant consultant; James Beard Awards judge; member, board of directors, American Inst. of Wine & Food, NY Chapter; author of two cookbooks.
Sam Ishii Gonzales, doctoral candidate, NYU; teaches aesthetics and film history at NYU and Hunter College; co-editor of two volumes on Hitchcock; has published articles on Lu¡s Buñ>uel, David Lynch, and the painter Francis Bacon.
Carol Goodman, MFA, The New School; author of The Lake of Dead Languages, The Seduction of Water and The Drowning Tree; short stories and poetry have appeared in The Greensboro Review, Literal Latte, Midwest Quarterly, and Other Voices.
Fran Gordon, directs Natl. Arts Club PAGE reading series; author, Paisley Girl, Quality Paperback Book Club's New Voices finalist; visiting writer at Yaddo and American Acad. In Rome; has contributed to Poets & Writers, Tin House, The Boston Globe, New York Review of Books, Hot Spots: Best Modern Erotic Fiction, and The Future Dictionary of America.
Terri J. Gordon, PhD, Columbia U.; core faculty member, New School Bachelor's program; has published articles on Josephine Baker, and on cabaret, film, and performance art in Nazi Germany; currently writing a book-length study of representations of the dancer in fin de siècle Paris; New School Distinguished Teaching Award, 2003.
Sara Gorfinkle, director, First Impression, a business and social etiquette consultancy; designs and leads workshops for executives; lectures and writes on international customs and manners; teaches good manners workshops to children and young adults.
Gabriel Gottlieb, PhD candidate at The New School for Social Research; teaches at Eugene Lang College; research interests include 20th-century Continental philosophy, Kant and German Idealism, and the problem of self-consciousness.
Sonia Granillo-Ogikubo, MA, Colegio Normal (Mexico); has taught Spanish in Japan and Mexico.
Thomas Grant, PhD, Rutgers U.; Emeritus Professor of English, U. of Hartford; has also taught at Welseyan U. and Yale U.; publications on English drama and American humorists; has lectured in the U.S. and abroad on Mark Twain; two-time Fulbright Scholar (Germany and Portugal).
Gabriel Grayson, principal NYC judicial system court-appointed dactylologist; television interviewer, producer, and actor; author of Talking With Your Hands, Listening With Your Eyes; recipient, Publishers Marketing Assn. Benjamin Franklin National Book Award.
J. Everet Green, PhD, Drew U.; DD, Howard U. Divinity School; has taught at every educational level from elementary to university; published works include Immanuel Kant's Critical Philosophy, The Transcendental Horizon, and Afrocentricity and Western Civilization.
Marc R. Greene, graphic designer, illustrator, and fine artist specializing in communications for nonprofit and social action organizations; clients include WFMU Radio, YWCA of the USA, and the NYC Board of Education.
Michelle Greene, BFA, Syracuse U.; College Instructor Credential in Welding, UC-Berkeley; commissions include MTA Rail Riders' Throne at 116th St. subway station; work exhibited at Franklin Parrasch Gallery and Paine Webber in NYC and the San Francisco Museum; taught at Chabot College and the Sculpture Center.
Herbert M. Greenhut, BSS, CUNY; lectures on U.S. history and popular music throughout the metro area; author of "Self Guided Tour of the Intrepid" and a "Holocaust Studies Program" used by several New York synagogues; former NYC public school teacher honored on retirement by the city council and the New York State Assembly.
Seth Greenwald, BFA, Parsons School of Design; photographer, owner of Seth Greenwald Creative Consulting; major commercial clients; formerly director of photography for international stock photo agency Photonica; represented in the permanent collection of the NY Historical Society.
Michael Grimaldi, BFA, Pratt Inst.; commercial photography in New York; work has appeared in European Travel and Life, Vogue, Forbes, and others; book projects for Stewart, Tabori and Cheng, Thorsens U.K., and Workman Publishing; corporate clients include Clairol, Hilton Intl., and McGraw Hill.
Eve Grubin, MFA, Sarah Lawrence College; MA, Bread Loaf School of English at Middlebury College; author of Morning Prayer, a book of poems; poems in journals including American Poetry Review, Pleiades, Barrow Street, Lit, The New Republic, Virginia Quarterly Review; programs director, Poetry Society of America.
Margarita Gutman, professor and chair of Architecture & Urban History, U. of Buenos Aires; has been a Scholar at the Getty Research Inst. And Woodrow Wilson Intl. Center; Fellow of the Intl. Center for Advanced Studies and the Vera List Center for Art & Politics; consultant/director of "2050" programs in Buenos Aires, Barcelona, NYC; author or editor of five books. |