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Les Krims was born in Brooklyn, New York.Krims studied at New York's Stuyvesant High School. [1] Richard Ben-Veniste ("Benti," as he was called in home-room at Stuyvesant), famous for prosecuting Richard Nixon, and A.D. Coleman, the former photography critic for The New York Times, were two of Krims' Stuyvesant classmates.
The Floating Foundation of Photography was a New York photography exhibition space, meeting place and teaching center. It is famous as a gathering place for a generation of influential New York photographers, including W. Eugene Smith, Arthur Tress, Mary Ellen Mark, Les Krims, Judy Dater, Lisette Model and Lee Witkin.
After serving as assistant director of the Light Gallery in New York, and a showing of his own photographs at the M.F.A. Gallery of the Rochester Institute of Technology, [3] Miller opened a gallery in his own name in 1984 on East 57th Street.
Edwar Amean has been photographing New Yorkers on the street since he was 14. 20-year-old photographer snaps stunning shots of strangers in Times Square Skip to main content
Crawford started his classical training in photography at the Rochester Institute of Technology in New York in 1972, where he had close contact with Betty Hahn, Nathan Lyons, Michael Bishop, and Les Krims, among others. [4] He returned to California as a graduate student in 1975 to continue his studies at the Claremont Graduate School. [4]
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"Les taught me invaluable lessons about life, work, and photography. He wasn't just my colleague but a good friend, a mentor, and a true inspiration." Les Duggins Sr. was a photographer for the ...
The magazine promoted the two as representatives of the ‘new photography’ of Switzerland. Tuggener was a role model for the younger artist, first mentioned to him by Frank's boss and mentor, Zurich commercial photographer Michael Wolgensinger (1913–1990) who felt that Frank would never fit the commercial system.