A student catches a spot of sunshine as she walks to the library on Monday, Feb. 5, 2024.
General Marketing and Illustrations
Images taken in controlled environments for marketing purposes or any type of photo illustrations. Photo retouching/editing is permitted. Any composite, generative fill, or AI work done in post must be noted in the caption.
University mascot paws lays on a pile of stuffed husky dolls during a studio photoshoot in Boston on Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2024.
Student studying while a streak of light hits her.
A student raises his fist at a cultural fashion show in honor of Black History Month.
Coral Gables, FL--2024-02-21--Photo by Matthew Rembold/University of Miami--A component of a Talos 200 Microscope is examined before being delivered to the Frost Institute of Chemistry and Molecular Sciences on Tuesday.
Coral Gables, FL--2024-02-28--Photo by Matthew Rembold/University of Miami--Gavin McKenna, a student at the University of Miami Herbert Business School, slices bagels for his "Barnyard Bagels Co." Food stand during the weekly Wednesday Farmer's market held at the University of Miami. McKenna started the bagel stand in collaboration with UM dining services and has freshly made bagels shipped overnight from New York to prep bagel sandwiches of all varieties for sale at his stand every Wednesday.
I chose to shoot the National Championship rings for Waterskiing in a water splash. The splash seen here is three splashes incorporated together with rings from the varies ten national championships. I shot the splashes in studio dropping a field hockey ball into a bowl of water which was in a child's swimming pool. Rings were shot separately, also in university studio.
A student is outlined by the afternoon sun as she rests against a pillar outside of the Samuel Cupples House on February 6, 2024.
Members of the Ballroom Performance Group rehearse before their annual showcase.
S3MT (3 Minute Theseus) student Shiqi Zhou, in Biomedical Engineering, "Personalized cancer vaccine development using 'Bubbles.'" Zhou’s research uses safe materials to create “bubbles” than can induce cancer-suppressing immune responses and eliminate cancer in mice.
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