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Aaron Chang (born August 9, 1956) [1] is an American photographer specialized in surfing and ocean photography. He spent 25 years as a senior photographer at Surfing Magazine; he was an early photographer to practice the act of shooting waves with a wide angle lens from the water. Chang later focused on fine art photography. [2]
San Diego [11] Battle Cry: 1955 Battle: Los Angeles: 2011 Beneath the Leaves: 2019 Julian [12] Beyond the Rocks: 1922 Hotel del Coronado [13] The Big Mouth: 1967 Blame it on the Night: 1984 San Diego [14] Blast: 2004 San Diego [15] Bloody Wednesday: 1988 Borderline: 1980 San Diego [16] The Boys in Company C: 1978 Bring It On: 2000 The Academy ...
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, ... Gene Hackman and Betsy Arakawa Seen in Last Photos Taken During Rare Outing Nearly 1 Year Before ...
SDUPS was first established on September 28, 1961, by underwater photographic pioneers Ron Church and Chuck Nicklin at San Diego's Diving Locker dive shop, formerly on Cass Street in Pacific Beach. Membership covers all levels of underwater photography from beginning U/W photographers to amateurs, semi-professional and full-time professional ...
Zelman developed a highly stylized form of hard-flash street photography while in art school [2] and Los Angeles Times art critic Leah Ollman compares the "psychological density" [3] of his work to the likes of Garry Winogrand, Larry Fink, Diane Arbus and William Klein- photographers that are "purposely getting it wrong in one way so as to get ...
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Ross had taken photographs for 27 years, and during the last eight years of his life used the Collodion process or wet-plates for his work. [4]Ross worked with three different cameras: a half-plate box-style camera made by Ty Guillory, an 8 by 10 inches (200 mm × 250 mm) bellows-style camera made by Black Art Woodcraft, and a 16 by 20 inches (410 mm × 510 mm) Chamonix.
I.W. Taber Hetch Hetchy Valley image from the Sierra Club Bulletin. Isaiah West Taber (August 17, 1830 – February 22, 1912 [1]) was an American daguerreotypist, ambrotypist, and photographer who took many pictures of noted Californians, which he donated to the California State Library "that the state may preserve the names and faces, and keep alive the memory of those who made it what it is."