Michael Carlebach

[3] Carlebach lived and photographed in south Florida for over three and a half decades, during which time he worked as a photojournalist for the Miami Herald as well as a staff photographer for The Village Post in Coconut Grove, FL.,[4] and as an unpaid photographer for Miami Children's Hospital’s Ventilation Assisted Children's Center sleepaway camp.

[6] In 2011, Carlebach donated images from his personal archives to the University of Miami Libraries’ Special Collections.

[7] The Michael L. Carlebach Photography Collection includes photographs from the George McGovern 1972 presidential campaign and Haitian immigrants held at the Krome Avenue Detention Center in south Florida, among many others, and "consists of over 5,000 silver prints, color slides, and publications.

"[8] He lives with his wife, Margot Ammidown, in Asheville, North Carolina.

Carlebach's work has appeared in group and solo exhibitions around the United States and abroad, including "Landscapes 2017" at The Center for Fine Art Photography in Fort Collins, CO selected by Lisa Volpe (2017),[9] "Scope 2016: the southern landscape" at VAE in Raleigh, NC (2016),[10] "The Mythology of Florida" at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans, LA[11] (2013), the solo exhibition "American Studies" at the Center for the Study of the American South in Chapel Hill, NC (2011), "Sharp Focus: Black and White Photographic Prints from the Michael L. Carlebach Collection” at the University of Miami (2011),[12] "This Way to the Crypt, II," Piedmont Arts, Martinsville, VA (2001), "This Way to the Crypt," one person show, Frances Wolfson Art Gallery, Miami-Dade Community College (1997), "Forced Out," (the plight of refugees) Los Angeles Municipal Art Museum (1989), World Exhibition of Photography, Berlin, West Germany (1974).

Carlebach in 2010