Greg has been an active photographer for over 30 years.  Although his professional career led him to become an entrepreneur and CEO in the hospitality software space, including a recent exit to private equity, continued to maintain his artistic passion throughout his working life.  While majoring in hotel administration at Cornell, Greg took many of his electives in the fine arts school, with a focus on black and white photography. 

Photography and his work have been closely connected.  Photography has always given him a way of looking at problems from a different perspective.  Just like motivating an organization towards a goal, a photographer strives to illicit a feeling in a viewer, not just record an event. 

Greg was fortunate that his work allowed him to travel the world.  His camera has travelled the Great Wall of China, the glaciers of Iceland, the great cities of Sydney, Hong Kong, Amsterdam, Kiev, Athens, St. Petersburg, London, the Killing Fields of Cambodia, the energetic streets of São Paulo and New York, and quiet places like Darien, Georgia.  His camera has travelled over 4 million miles.

Greg currently lives in Provincetown, Massachusetts, so you will see many images from his time there.

His images are not “deliberate”; he doesn’t actively wake-up to take a particular shot or grab his entire bag of lenses.  Therefore he is just aware, never knowing what he will see.  “Bretto's” is a good example of this.  Greg was walking down a street in Athens when he spotted a single person having a drink against a beautiful row of  bottles in a bar.  A single, unexpected shot.

But all of his images have a richness that’s reflected in their depth and colors and you will often see him print on metal, a technique that provides a unique and absorbing experience for the viewer.  Greg's first gallery show was at the D'Aguilar Art Foundation in Nassau, The Bahamas were he sold most his displayed images and he was featured in the Nassau Guardian.