Ken Carl (born Edmund Ken Carl April 4, 1956, in Chicago, Illinois) is a documentary photographer based in Chicago. He studied photography at Columbia College Chicago and works with photo-based digital imaging as his principal means of creating images for corporate, documentary, editorial and educational programs.
In 2003, Ken Carl took part in a 21-day project in Tanzania Africa as a documentary photographer for Climb for Kids program[1] to capture a cultural and technology exchange program with high school students from Chicago installing the first ever computer lab in a secondary school in Tanzania. [2]
In 2013, traveling with Momenta, an organization that promotes photography for social change, Carl visited the Latika Roy Foundation in Dehradun, India. His photos appeared in the October 2013 issue of U.S. Catholic magazine[3] and helped highlight the Latika Roy Foundation's work serving children with disabilities in India. The body of work began as a personal project and became an ongoing documentary. The work with Latika Roy evolved into his first one-man show.
Carl's work with Cancer Today magazine, a quarterly publication by the American Association for Cancer Research[4][5][6] and Cure magazine[7] lent support in the fight against cancer.
In November 2015, Ken Carl's first multimedia video debuted at the Chicago Cultural Center as part of Moving Dialogs: "Cultural Connections",[8] a collaboration between Deeply Rooted Dance Theater, with artistic director Kevin Iega Jeff and Flatfoot Dance Company of Durban, South Africa, with artistic director Lliane Loots. Funded by MacArthur Foundation International, this exchange brought Flatfoot Dance Company to Chicago where company members trained and collaborated on the creation of a work titled Encounters, and offered forums throughout Chicago about the 20th anniversary of the end of apartheid.
Ken Carl has been the official photographer for Taiko Legacy and director Tatsu Aoki for over six years.[when?]