Robert Houser
- San Francisco CA
- Tel: +1 415 252 7818
- Ym9iQHJvYmVydGhvdXNlci5jb20=
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About
Robert Houser photographs people, real people, for health related advertising worldwide. Based in the San Francisco area, he has been an award winning storyteller for over thirty years.
His portrait and healthcare lifestyle work has a strong narrative focus, drawn from the connections he makes with every person he photographs. A chameleon at heart, Bob’s ability to connect is uncanny. Whether he’s shooting the CEO of a Fortune 500 company, a plant manager at an industrial site or a rare disease patient for a pharmaceutical company, his subjects’ comfort is paramount in creating genuine imagery, be it motion or stills.
The studio’s project, Facing Chemo, has been awarded recognition by Communication Arts, and has travelled and published in venues worldwide.
Robert Houser: Latest magazines
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showcase magazine Mar 2024 california issue 951
Robert Houser People & Healthcare Photographer
People, real people. To make healthcare images genuine, Robert Houser has spent decades bonding with his subjects – finding a way in.
A chameleon at heart, Bob’s ability to connect is uncanny. Whether he’s shooting the CEO of a Fortune 500 company, a plant manager at an industrial site or a rare disease patient for a pharmaceutical company, his subjects’ comfort is paramount in creating sincere imagery, be it motion work or stills.
Based in the San Francisco area, he has been an award winning storyteller for over thirty years.
The studio’s project, Facing Chemo, has been awarded recognition by Communication Arts, and has travelled and published in venues worldwide.
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spotlight magazine Apr 2020 on humanity
San Francisco: Robert Houser
"I work in healthcare, often with rare disease patients. People will often ask me if I find it to be depressing, and yet, honestly, it is quite the opposite.
I once spent an afternoon photographing a four-year-old with a rare and physically debilitating disease for which there was no treatment at the time. When I arrived at her house, she grabbed my hand, brought me to her room and said, “Let’s play princess.” Donning a princess dress she danced and twirled while I photographed – to her during those few hours, she was a princess.
Even more rewarding was almost a decade later when I met her again after having undergone a new therapy. Distant and aloof, she was a typical teenager, and I smiled thinking about her dancing."
more magazines
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