Jeff's previous work has taken him to the Tour de France for a behind-the-scenes\xa0documentary, and he has photographed and filmed a number of people including Robin\xa0Williams, Jane Goodall, and Nelson Mandela.
\nJeff's\xa0short film, Geocaching: From the Web to the Woods, won Best Short Doc at the Sidewalk Moving\xa0Picture Festival and Jeff won the Best Editing award for his film The Strange Case at the\xa0Action on Film Festival.
\nJeff's imagery has exhibited at: The Denver Museum of Nature and Science, The Aspen\xa0Institute, The Scripps Institute, The United Nations Climate Change Conference in\xa0Copenhagen, and before the U.S Congress on Capitol Hill.
\nIn 2007, Jeff got his first taste of the Arctic when as a Stanford student he worked as a\xa0videographer with National Geographic photographer James Balog on the initial expedition\xa0of The Extreme Ice Survey (or EIS).\xa0
\nThat winter, the\xa0EIS\xa0team scouted and filmed glaciers that now appear in the recent documentary feature film Chasing Ice.\xa0
\nChasing Ice follows National Geographic photographer James Balog across the Arctic as he\xa0deploys time-lapse cameras designed for one purpose: to capture a multi-year record of\xa0the world's changing glaciers.