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Showing posts from February, 2018

Alex Bolen(Entry 8)

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Alex Bolen         Since I have done all older photographers so far, I decided to do a more modern and current photographer. Alex Bolen, owner of Shutter Darlings Photography is one my favorite photoragpers right now. She went to the same high school as me about 5 years before I did. She cheered and would come back to take pictures of the cheerleaders which is how I met her. Her work is so dreamy and always so creative which is why I love it. She got a few minutes in fame for a rainbow baby picture she created. I was in love with this picture.  

William Eggleston(Entry 7)

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William Eggleston        Eggleston was born in Memphis, Tennessee on July 27, 1939. He was an American photography who was most well known for his pictures of every day random objects. He had a way of making the people wonder what they were looking at. He was one of the people who helped establish color photography. At a young age he was interested in visual arts which led him down the path of photography. He was inspired by many different photographers which helped mold him into the photographer he became. 

Ansel Adams(Entry 6)

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Ansel Adams          Ansel Adams was born in February 1902 and later died April 1984. He was an American photographer and environmentalist. He is extremely well known for his black and white landscapes. Adams and another photographer developed "Zone Systems"  to determine proper exposure. He created his own photography group along with some fellow photographers.

Helen Levitt(Entry 5)

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Helen Levitt             Helen Levitt was born in August 1913 and later died in March 2009. She was an American photographer living in New York. She also liked to capture street photography.  She dropped out of high school to work for a photographer. That is how she learned to develop photos in the dark room.  Her photographs were later published in " In The Streets: chalk drawings and messages, New York City 1938-1948. She has been called "the most celebrated and least known photographer of her time."

Walker Evans(Entry 4)

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Walker Evans             Walker Evans was born in November 1903 and later died April 1975. He was an American photographer as well as a photo journalist. He was actually born in St. Louis, Missouri. He began photography once he was living in New York. He was most known for his FSA or Farm Security Administration work.  He once said his goal as a photographer was to create pictures that are "literate, authoritative, transcendent". By documenting the effects of the Great Depression he was able to do just that. 

Henri Cartier-Bresson(Entry 3)

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Henri Cartier-Bresson             Henri was a French Humanist photographer, who was a pro at capturing candid moments. He was born in August 1908 and died not to long ago in August 2004. He was a role model to many future photographers. He mainly captured people on the streets in their day to day lives. He actually attempted a music and painting career before photography. He later got into film making and photo journalism where he would show more of his work.  

Dorothea Lange(Entry 2)

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Dorothea Lange             Dorthea Lang was born in May 1895 and died later in her life in October 1965. At a young age she developed polio which left her right leg weakened. She was an American Photographer who was well known for her work during the Depression-Era. Lange went to school to become a photographer. She decided to travel the world with a friend but was robbed in San Fransisco, which led her to stay there. Eventually she opened her own studio and was married. She was able to capture the real lives of the people during the depression.

Sally Mann (Entry 1)

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Sally Mann         Sally Mann is an American born photography who specializes in portrait photography. She is rather different then normal photographers though. She liked to capture children, sexuality, and death, things that were out of the norm. All of which were very controversial topics at that time. She got introduced to photography from her father as a little girl and later on as a teenager took it on for herself. Later in her career she published images of twelve year old girls called "At Twelve" that were published in one of her books. She released a series of photos in 1992 called "Immediate Family" that people were very concerned about. Many were concerned that her work resembled child pornography or that she was exploiting her children. She felt the pictures were a ordinary thing for mothers to see in their everyday life. There are two films out about her life https://www.britannica.com/biography/Sally-Mann