- Eddie Adams Workshop XVII - Awarded an assignment for “Guitar World” - 59th College Photographer of the Year - Honorable Mention - Pictorial Published: - San Francisco Chronicle, News Photographer, Current Magazine, The Skateboard Mag., Thrasher, Onboard, Titus, South Coast Beacon, Juice Magazine, VC Reporter, Herbivore, Audrey, surfclass.com. Exhibitions: - A Camera with a Person Attached. Ventura, CA 2004
Added @ Adams Shelby lee:
For more than twenty five years Shelby Lee Adams has been photographing in Appalachia, documenting families residing deep in the Kentucky mountainside. His unrelenting dedication to this region is a testament to his desire to bring honor to people he has come to call family. Shelby Lee Adams was born in Hazard, a small town in eastern Kentucky. Although he grew up in the back seat of his father's car, moving from place to place, Hazard was where he settled, living with his grandparents while he attended high school. Trapped between two world -- country kids and town kids -- Adams never fit in, immersing himself in photography books and anything affiliated with the arts. This was the mid 1960s and the Peace Corps had a great interest in the poverty sweeping the people of Appalachia. When a film crew visited his home town, Adams naturally wanted to help, taking them to his meet his grandparents and his uncle so they could film their daily lives. When the media described them as malnourished and poor, his friends and family felt betrayed. This devastated Adams, who felt he had misled the people he so dearly loved -- an experience that had a profound impact on him.
It wasn't until he left Kentucky to attend college that he understood the lessons he learned from the country people. A summer job working at a mental institution helped shape his understanding and compassion for people deemed unfit -- a lesson which helped his artistic growth. While attending junior college, Adams decided he wanted to go to art school and was accepted at the Cleveland Institute of Art. Finally surrounded by artists, he experienced a complete culture shock, rejecting his Appalachian upbringing, telling people he was from Cincinnati.
Embarrassed by his past, Adams stayed away from Hazard and his family, searching for a new identity. By the second year in college, Adams was exposed to the FSA photographers who documented the lives of people living in poverty. Although initially defensive about the work, Adams submerged himself in documentary books, showing them to his family on a summer visit. His uncle, a county doctor, took him on house calls to meet people similar to the ones in the books. More than twenty five years later, Shelby Lee Adams is still visiting these people, returning year after year, documenting their lives.
Whether documenting a home funeral, a family gathering on the porch or the worn faces of poverty, Adams's images are so raw we want to both turn away and stare. The humanity in their faces, the comfort of their stance, are indications that an insider is showing us a reality few people would ever see. That Adams has returned to the same families for years is a testament to his dedication to show their painful existence while maintaining their dignity. Although he now lives in Massachusetts, Shelby Lee Adams's heart is forever in Appalachia.
Added @ Aigner Lucien:
Lucien Aigner / Aigner László (Érsekújvár, 1901 – Waltham, 1999) He is a photo reporter who at ninety-six is capable of getting into a sprightly argument, in a Japanese restaurant in Massachusetts, with his bosom buddy Stefan Lóránt about whether Márkus Emília was a member of the National Theatre in 1919, and whether the tram used to stop before the theatre or not. Meanwhile, two world wars and eighty years have passed. It is hard to find an archive of such richness as his. It would be just a slight exaggeration to say that any well-known personality absent from those archives cannot have existed.A museum has been organized out of his collection of pictures already during his lifetime.
Added @ Allard William Albert:
Added @ Alvarez Bravo Manuel:
Manuel Alvarez Bravo Born 1902, Died 2002 Photographer
A self-taught photographer, Manuel Alvarez Bravo purchased his first camera at age twenty while working at a government job. His earliest success at photography came around 1925, when he won first prize in a local photographic competition in Oaxaca. He returned to Mexico City, where he had been born, and in 1927 met Tina Modotti, who introduced him to a lively intellectual and cultural environment of other artists from various disciplines. Among them was Edward Weston, who encouraged Alvarez Bravo to continue photographing; Weston wrote to him in 1929: "Photography is fortunate in having someone with your viewpoint. It is not often I am stimulated to enthusiasm over a group of photographs."
Alvarez Bravo taught photography at the San Carlos Academy in the late 1930s, documented the work of Mexican mural painters including Diego Rivera, and contributed images to the journal Mexican Folkways . His primary subject interests have ranged from the nude form to folk art, particularly burial rituals and decorations.
Added @ Andriesse Emmy: from holland
Added @ Annan James Craig:
James Craig Annan (1864-1946). Artist of 2 portraits.
Born in Dumbarton, William Strang came to London to study at the Slade School under Alphonse Legros and remained there for the rest of his life. A prolific painter of portraits, biblical and subject paintings, he is best known for his portrait drawings in a style based on Holbein, and for his many etchings which are remarkable for their unity of vision and superb draughtsmanship. This photogravure was published in America in Alfred Stieglitz's Camera Work in July 1907 under the title The Etching Printer - William Strang, Esq., ARA. It shows Strang, who stands before a printing press, examining an etcher's plate.
Added @
Appel Dieter:
Dieter Appelt has been a Professor of Photography, Film and Video at the Hochschule der Kunst in Berlin since 1982. He studied photography at the Academy of Fine Art in Berlin as well as music at Leipzig and Berlin Music Academies.
Appelt's work of the late 70's & 80's was typically related to performance art and often incorporated a level of sculptural construction. He began photographing to record his performance in outdoor settings -for some of these performances he built structures out of branches and positioned himself within the construct - a tower roughly crafted of tree branches, a slab cut into the ice, and mud as a protective yet primal second skin. Duration and decay are persistent themes in Appelt's photographs. He often uses exposures that are hours long in an attempt to record the effects of the passage of time.
His photographs have been exhibited extensively in Europe since the 1970's. He has had major solo exhibitions at the Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. Appelt's work has also been acquired by major collections internationally including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Centre George Pompidou, Paris; and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, California. Dieter Appelt is linked to the following websites:
Added @ Araki Noboyushi:
This is a one-man exhibition of Japanese photographic prodigy, Araki, who achieved the brilliant success overseas as well in throwing private exhibitions in Venice, Korea and other places in 2002. His early works were defined with its sharp expressions that scoop out the private inner self of the model, after that there was a series of portraits, nudes and landscapes in typical “Arakism” style with a touch of irony, rebel and satire. The exhibition this time features 10 color prints and 5 monochromes focused on the theme of “hyper-beauty” with young female models as the photogenic subject. This interesting collection is successful in exposing Araki’s aesthetic that refines fleeting eroticism from any context of society and metaphor.
Added @ Arbus Diane:
Photographer Diane Arbus (1923-1971) captured provocative and unsettling portraits of modern Americans that were difficult to put aside. Her unflinchingly direct and often controversial photographs are enjoying renewed attention in the art world.
An Arbus show that opened Jan. 12 at New York University's Grey Art Gallery and will travel to Lawrence on a national tour, shows the influence of KU's Spencer Museum of Art.
Organized by the Spencer Museum and the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum, "Diane Arbus: Family Albums" holds at its heart more than 200 previously unseen photographs, both contact sheets and finished prints, which Arbus in December 1969 made for a private commission. Also on view are images Arbus shot on assignment for Esquire magazine, including pictures of the families of Ricky Nelson, Jayne Mansfield and Ogden Reid.
The exhibition catalog has received widespread critical acclaim. The book features essays by the two curators: John Pultz, KU associate professor of art history and the Spencer's curator of photography, and Anthony Lee, associate professor of art history at Mount Holyoke.
Added @ Arnold Eve:
Eve Arnold was a world class photojournalist who followed Marilyn's career. She was trusted by Marilyn, who often called on her when the pictures had to be right.
Added @
Atget Eugene:
Atget was born February 12, 1857 in Libourne, France. A sailor until 1879, an actor until 1897, and then briefly a painter before taking up photography in 1898, he brought a utilitarian’s sensibilities to his documentation of vieux Paris (Old Paris). Atget described himself as an archivist, lecturer, and author/publisher, while the sign on his door labeled his photographs merely as “Documents for artists.” Though this very private man shirked the title of artist (famously asking that his name not accompany his photograph “L’Eclipse—Avril 1912” when published in La Revolution Surrealist), he came to be celebrated by the surrealists, heralded as an important precursor to the New Objectivity, and remembered for a strong influence on the work of Walker Evans, Lee Friedlander, and many others. Man Ray claims to have discovered him (around 1926), but most of the world came to know Atget posthumously through Bernice Abbott’s tireless promotion of his work and his place as both ancestor and forerunner to modern photography. Atget was still largely unknown when he died in Paris on August 4, 1927, but within a decade was all but cannonized. Today his work numbers in most major institutional collections, such as those of the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, The Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris.
Added @ Atwood Jane Evelyn:
Jane Evelyn Atwood, born in New York but living in France since 1971, received the first W. Eugene Smith Grant in Humanistic Photography for her continuing study of the blind. Her book on the subject, "Exterior Nuit," was published in 1998 as part of the Photo Poche series by Editions Nathan. She is the author of four other books, two on French prostitutes in Paris, one on the French Foreign Legion, and her most recent, "Too Much Time," a 10-year study of women in prison. In 1987, she received a World Press Prize for "Jean-Louis--Living and Dying with AIDS."
Added @ Averon Richard:
Added @ ასო A ამოვწურე და თუ ვინმეს დააინტერესებს B-ზე გადავალ
Ian Bradshaw is a freelance photographer based in Virginia and New York. He has had a long and distinguished career as a photographer and also as a photo editor. He has been Photo Editor of National Daily and Sunday Newspapers in Britain as well as photo editor of the Telegraph Sunday Color magazine in London.
He is a former winner of the World Press Photo Award for his famous picture of a streaker being arrested by a London bobby with a strategically placed helmet. He is a former winner of the British Press Photographer of the Year, Texaco Industrial Photographer of the Year, Ilford Industrial Photographer of the Year and his photographs have been voted Life magazine Picture of the Year and People magazine Picture of the Decade.
He has recently won five CASE awards for his work at Washington & Lee University and a Gold ADDY 2002 for his work on the Virginia Episcopal School campaign. In addition to the CASE awards his educational work has consistently won top advertising awards in America culminating in the Howard Packett Award for Creative Excellence for his work on Chatham Hall viewbook 2003.
He is the author of The Thinking Photographer and Pro Techniques of Creative Photography. He is represented by Watson & Spierman in New York where he specializes in Environmental Portraiture in Advertising & Annual Reports and he also specializes in Educational work for viewbooks and magazines for colleges and Universities across America. Ian Bradshaw moved from England to America four years ago and his unique specialist approach to people and portraiture attracted schools, colleges & Universities throughout the USA.
He travels extensively and tries to balance his educational work with his commitments in the advertising world of New York. A former photojournalist, his wide ranging work covers everything from sports to interiors and architecture but specializes in people. It is his definitive style of people photography that has caught the attention of art directors in America and worldwide.
Added @ Bill Brandt:
British Photographer 1903 - 1983
The greatest British photographer since Fox Talbot was in fact born and brought up in Germany, and in later life attended elocution lessons to mask his accent. A man of privileged background, he did more than most to highlight the inequalities of the English class system, and, as an artist, he used photography at a time when it was seen as the poor relation of all other art forms. But some of his most powerful images, such as those documenting social deprivation, were, strictly speaking, fictitious, featuring not real-life subjects but friends, family and paid extras.
Brandt's legacy is anything but obscure. "He was the one person who anyone with ambition measured themselves against from the 1950s," says Mark Haworth-Booth of the Victoria and Albert Museum. "There was no one who could come close to him".
Brandt's career began in Paris in 1929, studying with Man Ray, and ended with his death in 1983. His influence can still be seen in the work of photographers as diverse as Eve Arnold, Don McCullin and Terry O'Neill, and artists such as Francis Bacon and David Hockney.
It wasn't simply in artistic circles that Brandt's black-and-white images resonated. His early assignments in the industrial north for Picture Post and Lilliput magazines, and his first book in 1936, The English at Home, which juxtaposed images of privilege and wealth with belowstairs working-class reality, also created a powerful portrait of social injustice that was to be a visual reference point for the politics of the post-war consensus.
There was hardly an area of photography that Brandt did not master. Haworth-Booth says he was more "three-dimensional" than other photographers. "He did landscape, social deprivation, surrealist, nudes and portraits he was always incredibly busy"
During the war, Brandt worked for the Ministry of Information and captured some of the most memorable pictures of Londoners during the Blitz. But his genius did not make him much money during his lifetime. In 1964 he was charging the Victoria and Albert Museum just £5 for a print - virtually cost price. At the Focus Gallery in London, where a collection of his work goes on display and on sale from Tuesday, prices are closer to £12,000.