Board_Advisors_etc 3..5
zona landscape. Resembling contemporary abstract paintings, they were admired by the Surrealists. After 1950, a number of photog ...
that often hint at the otherworldly. The Starn twins (Doug and Mike) tore and reassembled photographs with tape. Artists such as ...
Alfred Steiglitz, Equivalent, 1929, gelatin silver print, 11.89.3 cm, Part purchase and part gift of An American Place, ex-coll ...
Further Reading Coke, Van Deren.Avant-Garde Photography in Germany, 1919–1939. New York: Pantheon Books, 1982. Daniel, Pete, Mer ...
291 andCamera Workeventually showed important modernist artworks of all kinds—paintings, draw- ings, sculptures—Stieglitz acted ...
zens, homeless, and participants in the sex trade. His Paris de Nuit (1933) was acclaimed as an instant classic. Trained as an a ...
and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The exhibitions he organized (e.g.,Light. 1968) were notable for their concept ...
posters, and in articles and exhibitions. They were also used as evidence in governmental hearings about child labor. Berenice A ...
acters of her life—her family, friends, drag queens, addicts, and lovers. War Photographers War photographers have risked their ...
John Heartfield (ne ́e Helmut Herzfeld, 1891– 1968) subverted the notion of the candid photo- journalist altogether. He made pol ...
Woman series was groundbreaking both for its subject and for the gender implications it explored. This was further explored in h ...
technically her photographs are not innovative, Cindy Sherman is considered a major figure of late-century photography for redef ...
cisely, or a new culture that would take into account the physicaltabula rasaof the war. The society that emerged sealed the cen ...
practitioner being August Sander (1876–1964), as well as Hugo Erfurth (1874–1948) who made por- traits of artists, politicians, ...
The Great War had obviously a much reduced impact on American society as it did not produce thetabula rasa effect—the Great Infl ...
ope. Weston and Strand, as well as Stieglitz, paid great attention to the making and the selecting of their prints conceived as ...
in the United States or totalitarian as in the Soviet Union, Italy, and Germany. This concern took different forms. Photojournal ...
demand for it was high and such popular magazines asNational Geographicmade a policy of publishing as much color as it could. By ...
HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY: POSTWAR ERA There is one thing the photograph must contain, the humanity of the moment. This kind of pho ...
Stieglitz. Up to the 1950s, photographers, especially in the United States, attempted to promote some sort of social message. Af ...
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