Gallery 164 in Waynesville Showcases Work of Ben Hamburger and Mary Leavines, The Laurel of Asheville
Art I Had to Have: Above It All, By Chad Buterbaugh, Medium, 07/24/2022
Painting Magic Mushrooms on Pill Bottles and Cell Phones, Ben Hamburger Contrasts Our Culture’s Mindful Ambitions and Mindless Habits, by Emily Pietras, Indy Week, 2/06/19
"When Confederate Statues Fall, This Artist is There to 'Commemorate This Time of Change'", The New And Observer, David Menconi, 02/13/19
Interview with Sharon P. Holland in South Scholarly Journal, Issue 50.1, "Crisis: Opportunity", 2018
Toppling Giants, Scalawag, 2019
Orange County Arts Commission Featured Artist of the Month, Vitamin O, 03/03/18
Community Arts Leaders in Baltimore, Commotion Magazine by MICA, 2/15/18
Voice of America: People in America, Uplifting Communities Through the World of Art, 10/04/17
'Facing Change' : Portraits of East Baltimore, By Sheilah Kast, Maureen Harvie, WYPR/NPR, 04/04/2017
"Stories of Change", By Kimberly Uslin, Baltimore Style, 03/31/2017
In Formstone Portraits, MICA Grad Student Captures Faces of Gentrification in East Baltimore, Baltimore Fishbowl, by Ethan McLeod, 04/24/2017
"For Refugee Children in Baltimore and Their Teacher, Art Is a Safe Zone", What It Means To Be American, A National Conversation Hosted By The Smithsonian and Arizona State University, By Ben Hamburger, 02/01/2017
"Art by Local Refugee Youth Explores "Sanctuary" By Christiana Amarachi Mbakwe, Baltimore Sun, 07/12/16
Inside Nola's "House" Exhibition at Foundation Gallery Review
"Ben Hamburger's luminously gritty local streetscapes with shadowy shotgun houses framed by spidery electrical wires and sometimes lurid streetlights, above, are so accessible that you have to look twice to realize that he's really a rigorous social realist who paints with efficiently evocative economy."
St. Pete Times article on Isolation of Intimacy at Studio @ 620