Friday, April 13, 2007

Eugene Atget

Eugene is not a very well-know French man. A few documented facts and a handful of recollections and legends provide a scant outline of the man. He was born in Lilbourne, near Bordeaux, in 1857 and worked as a sailor during his youth. From the sea he turned to the stage, although he didn’t have much success. At the age of forty he quit acting and took up some painting tentatively, which somehow lead him to photography and bounded on his new journey, his true life’s work.
Atget assigned himself an alluring and provoking subject, the city of Paris. Pairs, the city of art and bridges over the Seine, of boulevards and cafes, of narrow, crooked streets and gray plane trees in the beautiful Luxembourg gardens.
To Atget, Paris was not a dream but an actuality a fact of hard material expressions, of strange contrasts and contradictions.
In recreating Paris for us and for all time, Atget gave it permanent reality by utilizing photography in its own right. He did not veer toward excessive concern with technique or toward the imitation of painting but steered a straight course, making the medium speak for itself in a superb rendering of materials, textures, surfaces, and details.

He worked quietly at his calling. Eugene wasn’t too progressive but he was patient with techniques that were obsolescent when he adopted them.
He was little given to experiment in the conventional sense, and less to theorizing. I suppose he had developed a true vision for photography. His work is unique on two different levels. Eugene was the maker of visual catalogue of fruits in French culture. Atget set himself the task of understanding and interpreting in visual terms a complex, ancient, and living tradition. The pictures that he made in the service of this are deceptively seductively reticent, poised, simple, dense, wholly with experience, mysterious, and true.

Thursday, April 5, 2007

Sebastião Salgado

Sebastião Ribeiro Salgado was born in Aimorés in 1944. He was the 6th child, and only boy in a family consisting of eight children. He stufied the economics of Brazil (1964-67) and had earned his M.A. in economics in 1968 from the University of São Paulo and Vanderbilt University. He earned his Ph.D. in economics at the University of Paris in 1971 and worked as a economist for the International Coffee Organization until 1973.

He discovered his love for photography when he borrowed his wife Lélia's camera on a trip to Africa and decided to switch to photography in 1973. He then joined the Sygma photo agency in 1974 to 1975 followed by the Gamma agency in 1975 until 1979. He was elected to membership in the international cooperative, Magnum Photos, and remained until 1994. He covered several news events and also started more personal documentary projects.





For seven years he wandered through Latin America. He walked to small mountain villages to produce the images for his exhibition, and eventually his book, Other Americas (1986), which was an in-depth examination of poorer parts of the world and how their cultures functioned. He did several documentary projects such as Workers (1993), After Terra: Struggle of the Landless (1997), and in 2000 Salgodo published Migrations of The Children.




Sabastiao Salgado is a world-renowned photographer, known to be part of the tradition of “concerned photography,” and has been awarded several major photographic prizes and awards recognizing his accomplishments from around the world. In 1994 he founded his own press agency, Amazonas Images, which is a representation of him and much of his work. He now lives in Paris with his two sons, and his wife, Lélia Wanick Salgado, who is also his collaborator and has designed most of his books.



My Sources:

http://web.utah.edu/unews/releases/03/sep/salgado.html

http://www.terra.com.br/sebastiaosalgado/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sebasti%C3%A3o_Salgado



Two links to pictures:


http://www.fao.org/common/photos/05_04_salgado_photos/salgado1.jpg

http://www.sergiosakall.com.br/montagem/sebastiao-salgado.jpg

August Sanders, the man, the photos.




August Sander

August Sander was born on November 17, 1876 to a carpenter in the mining industry in Germany. He began his Photography career as a photographer’s assistant who was also with the mining company. After becoming very interested in the subject he borrowed enough money from his uncle to set up his own his own darkroom and buy the proper equipment. He spent some time doing his photography and when he served in the German military from 1897 to 1899 he served as a photographer’s assistant. After his time in the military he spent some time traveling across Germany.

In 1901, Sander settled down in the town of Graz and started working in a photographer’s studio. After a few years he became the sole proprietor of the studio. But left in 1910 to set up his new studio in Cologne. In 1927, Sander and writer Ludwig Marthar went on a trip to travel through Sardinia for three months taking over 500 photos on his way.

During the NAZI rule of Germany, August found that his work and form of expression were severely limited due to the strict control of the government. Sander’s son Erich was arrested during this time for being a member of the left wing Socialist Worker’s Party in Germany. He died in prison in 1944 shortly before the end of his sentence. At the outbreak of the Second World War Sander moved to a rural region of the country, but his studio was destroyed anyway by an allied bombing raid in 1944.

August Sander is most well known for his portraits of the German people during the reign of the Weimar Republic. He used a method of showing the divided classes of society in his pictures.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007






Edward Burtynsky [1995-]





Burtynskys view in his words

“Nature transformed through industry is a predominant theme in my work. I set course to intersect with a contemporary view of the great ages of man; from stone, to minerals, oil, transportation, silicon, and so on. To make these ideas visible I search for subjects that are rich in detail and scale yet open in their meaning. Recycling yards, mine tailings, quarries and refineries are all places that are outside of our normal experience, yet we partake of their output on a daily basis.”

“These images are meant as metaphors to the dilemma of our modern existence; they search for a dialogue between attraction and repulsion, seduction and fear. We are drawn by desire - a chance at good living, yet we are consciously or unconsciously aware that the world is suffering for our success. Our dependence on nature to provide the materials for our consumption and our concern for the health of our planet sets us into an uneasy contradiction. For me, these images function as reflecting pools of our times.”





Famous works

Some of his more so famous works are:
· Breaking ground
· Quarries
· Urban Mines
· Ships
· Oil
· Three Gorges and,
· China





Edward Burtynsky was born febuary 22nd 1955 in St. Catherines, Ontario.He received a diploma for graphic arts, at Niagra College, in Welland Ontario, and took B.A.A., Photographic Arts, in Ryerson Polytechnichnical University, in Toronto Ontario. In the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa, Ontario holds a catalog of his (2003); and has been through various institutions across North America. He has work in in the collections of the Bibliotheque National in Paris and France; the Guggenheim Museum in New York; the museum of modern Art in New York; The los Angeles County Museum in New; the Museum of Photographic Arts in San Diego; and the San






My sources:








Two links to pictures:



Sunday, March 25, 2007

Photojournalism

In this assignment you will select an event or issue from the 20th or 21st century (unions, the Olympic bombing, communism, prohibition, healthcare etc..)

Collect images that support multiple perspectives of that event. Try to be as diverse as possible. Look for aesthetically strong images from a variety of sources. Collect a minimum of 15 strong images.

Using your five strongest images create a blog post about your topic. Please be use to use all original text. Explain your choice of images in detail.

A few excellent photojournalism sources:
Reuters http://www.reuters.com/news/pictures
Magnum http://www.magnumphotos.com
Associated Press http://www.ap.org/pages/product/photoservices.html
Contact Press Images http://www.contactpressimages.com/

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Eugene Atget



Eugene Atget was a famous photographer that dedicated his life to take pictures of the city Paris for thirty years. Eugene Atget was born in Bordeaux in eighteen-fifty-six. His uncle brought him up because he was an orphan. At an early age Eugene Atget was shipped out to sea working as a cabin boy. After he finished being a cabin boy he decided he wanted to be an actor. He got a few jobs acting usually playing the role of a villain because his physical appearance made it suite him.

After a little while he found that acting was not rewarding enough for himself and turned to art and painting. When he didn't exceed in that he turned to photography. Assuming he had experience in drama, observations and travel, his main goal was to photograph the monuments of Paris like: sites, houses, streets, chateaux and subjects about to disappear. He then found that he was not getting any more rewarding in photography then in acting, but he stuck to taking photos and soon got some recognition for some of his work .

Eugene Atget started selling his work, but when World War Two started in 1914 Atget was afraid of it and people started assuming he was a spy or a lunatic. Atget then stopped selling his photographs (which was a tragedy because his photos are so meaningful). When Eugene Atget died in 1927 he got little understanding of his work and little recognition of it,
the archives of the Palais Royale bought some of his plates for their record value but at very low prices. In a way Eugene Atget didn't express himself to the public understanding and was forgotten.

Even though Eugene Atget was forgotten about after he died, he is now seen as a brilliant artist photographer. His pictures teach us a lot about Paris but they can also teach us about composition rules and moods.

My favorite picture by Eugene Atget is:


(couldn't put on my post) The URL for the Image is http://www.eastman.org/fm/atget/htmlsrc/m197601090009_ful.html#topofimage

What I like about this picture is the diminishing perspective.

My other pictures URL is http://www.masters-of-photography.com/A/atget/atget_coin_full.html


(sorry about the inconvenience if you have any questions just ask me!?!


Links:

http://www.masters-of-photography.com/A/atget/atget.html

http://www.eastman.org/fm/atget/htmlsrc/index.html

Friday, March 9, 2007

Dorothea Lange

Dorothea Lange











“Migrant Mother”




Dorothea Lange (May 26, 1895 – October 11, 1965) was an American documentary photographer with a lot of influence. She studied photography at the Columbia University in New York City. Her teacher was Clarence H. White. In 1918, she moved to San Francisco, where she opened a very successful portrait studio. With the Great Depression (1930’s) she started to change her picture-motives from the studio to the street. She and her husband Maynard Dixon decided to travel and they took pictures of native people.
In 1935 she divorced from her first husband and married Paul Schuster Taylor, who was responsible for most of Lange’s education in social and political matters. The both started to work together. They documented poverty and migrant laborers. Her husband was interviewing and collecting economic data, Lange was taking the pictures.
Her pictures had success and they brought attention to the problems of the population (displaced farm families, migrant workers, and sharecroppers (sharecropping: landowners allow using land but in return they want to share the crop that was produced on the land)).
Lange’s most famous picture is “Migrant Mother” (picture at the top). It was taken in Nipomo, California, March 1938 and it shows a woman with a child whose sons went to get help for their broken car.
All in all, Lange photographed the development of ethnic groups and workers during the Great Depression.
During World War II Dorothea Lange documented the internment of Japanese-Americans in camps and then she turned her objective on women and members of minority groups.But her work wasn’t be seen by a bigger part of the population until 1972 when the Whitney Museum displayed 27 of her photographs in "Executive Order 9066". A reporter from the New York Times (A.D. Coleman) called her pictures: “documents of such a high order that they convey the feelings of the victims as well as the facts of the crime."
Lange traveled a lot during the 1950’s and 1960’s. She was in Vietnam, Ireland, Pakistan and India, and she was writing many photographic essays for Life magazine. Lange’s pictures were printed in books and displayed in museums, the most in the Oakland Museum of California. She said about herself not to be an artist but she said of her own work: “To live a visual life is an enormous undertaking, practically unattainable…But I have only touched it, just touched it.”


My sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothea_Lange
http://www.americanswhotellthetruth.org/pgs/portraits/Dorothea_Lange.html


Two links to her pictures:
http://artseal.citysearch.com/page/15klg/Figurative__Portraiture__amp__Special_Exhibits/Dorothea_Lange.html
http://www.ocaiw.com/galleria_fotografi/index.php?lang=en&author=lange


by Franziska Bandow