lence, International Editorial Design Competition, 1982;
Photographer Award, Photographic Society of Japan,
1989; Art Directors Club 70th Annual Exhibition Merit
Award, 1991. Living in New York City.
Individual Exhibitions
2000 Hiro/2000; Maison Europe ́enne de la Photographie;
Paris, France
Selected Group Exhibitions
1959 Photography in the Fine Arts; Metropolitan Museum
of Art; New York, New York
1968 One Hundred Years of Harper’s Bazaar; Hallmark
Gallery; New York, New York
1977 Fashion Photography; George Eastman House; Roche-
ster, New York, and traveling
1985 Shots of Style; Victoria and Albert Museum; London,
England, and traveling
1990 Photographie: de la re ́clame a ́ la publicite ́; Centre
Georges Pompidou, Paris, France
1990 The Indomitable Spirit; International Center of Photo-
graphy; New York, New York
1991 Appearances; Victoria and Albert Museum; London,
England
1994 Fashion Photography: Avedon, Hiro, Penn; Art Basel
25 ‘94 Galerie Zur Stockeregg, Zurich, Switzerland
Selected Works
Shinjuku Station 27, Tokyo, Japan, 1962
Harry Winston Necklace, New York City, 1963
Donna Mitchell, Craters of the Moon, Idaho, 1968
Popping Pills, New York City, 1972
Apollo Spaceflight Training Suits, Houston, Texas, 1978
Foot Series 6, New York City, 1982
Fighting Birds 35-39, Baltimore, Maryland, 1988
Child 26, New York City, 1991
Further Reading
Avedon, Richard, ed.Hiro: Photographs. Boston: Little,
Brown and Company, 1999.
Edwards, Owen. ‘‘Is This Man America’s Greatest Photo-
grapher?’’ American Photographer, vol. 8 (January
1982).
Hiro.Fighting Fish/Fighting Birds: Photographs. Essay by
Susanna Moore. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1990.
Woodward, Richard B. ‘‘Hiro.’’Graphis, vol. 48 (March/
April 1992).
HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY:
NINETEENTH-CENTURY
FOUNDATIONS
To fully understand the twentieth-century history
of photography, it is necessary to return to photo-
graphy’s beginnings, to the contextual environment
of its ‘‘invention’’ in France and England and to
important precedents. Although historians docu-
ment through texts as early as the fifth century BC
the phenomenon of light projected through a small
opening (aperture), creating variable patterns on a
surface, photography’s ‘‘pre-history’’ really began
in the Renaissance with two basic photographic
concepts: the ideas of the ‘‘frame’’ and of the ‘‘box.’’
The ‘‘frame’’ is an important editing device allow-
ing two-dimensional representation of three-di-
mensional space (a drawing, a painting, later a
photograph) and depends largely on principles of
linear perspective developed in 1435 by the Italian
painter Leone Alberti inOn Painting. The ‘‘box’’
combines the light source, aperture, and surface
into one entity, the ‘‘camera obscura.’’ This Renais-
sance drawing device conceived by Leonardo da
Vinci (about 1500) and described by Giovanni della
Porta in Natural Magic (1553), is literally a ‘‘dark
room’’ with one wall (opposite a tiny opening)
becoming the vertical section of a cone of light: the
frame (called ‘‘Alberti’s window’’). The camera
obscura improved through time becoming smaller
and more portable; optics were added (the idea
attributed to Daniello Barbaro in 1568), and mirrors
to ‘‘right the image.’’
Thus, a cumulative effort of many centuries of
ideas and innovations allowed the inventors of
photography, Joseph-Nice ́phore Nie ́pce, Louis
HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY: NINETEENTH-CENTURY FOUNDATIONS