Barbara Gluck
Barbara Gluck is a retired American photojournalist, art photographer, speaker, writer, and spiritual healing facilitator.
After an early career in advertising, she spent almost four years in Vietnam and produced award-winning photojournalism during the Vietnam War. In the late 1970s she worked as an art photographer, and her "Light Painting" series was exhibited in multiple major museum shows.
In the early 1980s, she co-founded the Light Institute, a center for "spiritual healing and multi-incarnational exploration" run by Chris Griscom in Galisteo, in New Mexico. In the late 1980s, Gluck went on to found the Global Light Network and the Soul Matrix Clearing, Healing and Empowerment System, which focused on releasing "The Primordial Imprints of Separation from God". She has taken this around the world.
Biography
Gluck was born in New York, the daughter of Hungarian immigrants Theodore Gluck, a diamond setter, and Elizabeth Gluck.She graduated from NYU with a major in communication arts and a minor in journalism, entering a career in advertising with McCann Erickson and later Benton & Bowles, before the president of the Young & Rubicam agency hired her as a Special Advisor. Her career as a photojournalist began in earnest during the Vietnam War. She was based in Saigon 1968/69 and 1972/73, working mostly for The New York Times. In 1976 she moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico and began her work as an art photographer, with a major exhibit "The Stream" opening at The Museum of Fine Arts in Santa Fe in 1979. She continued her photojournalism as well. During the 1970s she lectured, co-produced the first New Mexico Film and Photography Festival in Santa Fe's Armory for the Arts, and served as a Public Relations and Media Consultant to the Navajo Nation - during the Navajo Hopi Land Dispute Commission.
She currently resides in Santa Monica, California. In late 2019, she was featured in a series of articles produced by students at the University of Southern California Annenberg School of Journalism about lower-income older people living in Los Angeles.