
Toensing work has also come to the fore Smithsonian, The Boston Globe, The Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, Time Magazine, and National Geographic Traveler, © Amy Toensing


His work has been exhibited around the world and recognized with numerous awards, including two solo performances at the Visa Pour l’Image, the Festival of Photographs in Pérignon France (2012 + 2017). © Amy ToensingĪ National Geographic Explorer (2021–22) and FUJIFILM producer, Toensing is also an Assistant Professor of Visual Storytelling at the SI Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University. He has also co-directed short documentary films about the marginalization of urban refugee children in Nairobi and widows in Uganda. Toensing completes its sixteenth feature story National Geographic Magazine on how conservation projects affect the surrounding culture and community. She has also covered issues such as food insecurity in the United States, Hurricane Katrina, and the devastation of Muslim women living in Western culture.

He has been a regular contributor to National Geographic The magazine spanned more than two decades and photographed cultures around the world, including the last cave dwelling tribes of Papua New Guinea, remote Aboriginal Australia, the Māori of New Zealand, and the Kingdom of Tonga. Amy Toensing Amy Tonsing is a photojournalist and filmmaker committed to telling stories with sensitivity and depth, and is known for her intimate stories about the lives of ordinary people.
