Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Image credits: Photoglob Zürich "The product name Kodachrome resurfaced in the 1930s with a three-color chromogenic process, a variant that we still use today," Osterman continues.
Outside photography, he draws inspiration from the entire range of arts, including music, literature, painting, filmmaking, sculpture and architecture. [ citation needed ] Early in his career, Balog concentrated on man's direct impact on nature, producing a series on nuclear missile silos in the agrarian landscapes of the American West.
His photographs are strongly influenced by the Neues Sehen (New Vision), an avantgarde movement of the 1920s and 1930s espoused by Bauhaus teacher László Moholy-Nagy, which encouraged photography of ordinary scenes using unfamiliar perspectives and angles, close-up details, use of light and shadow, and experimentation with multiple exposure.
Lai Afong seems to have been the only Chinese photographer of his generation to be embraced by his foreign contemporaries. [1] However, his work is distinct among them, as many of Lai Afong’s photographic compositions show the technical and aesthetic influence of traditional Chinese painting, known as guóhuà. [13]
Andreas Gursky (born 15 January 1955) is a German photographer and professor at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, Germany. [1] He is known for his large format architecture and landscape colour photographs, often using a high point of view. His works reach some of the highest prices in the art market among living photographers.
Cameron showed an interest in photography in the late 1850s and there are indications that she experimented with making photographs in the early 1860s. [1] [13] Around 1863, her daughter and son-in-law gave her a sliding-box camera for Christmas. [4] The gift was meant to provide a diversion while her husband was in Ceylon. [13]
Ruff commented on his influences: "My teacher Bernd Becher, showed us photographs by Stephen Shore, Joel Meyerowitz, and the new American colour photographers." [6] He is often compared with other members of a prominent generation of European photographers that, includes Thomas Struth, Andreas Gursky, and Rineke Dijkstra. [7]
Yosemite Valley, View from Inspiration Point, 1879, in the Princeton University Art Museum Minerva Terraces, Mammoth Hot Springs, National Park, by Watkins. Carleton E. Watkins (1829–1916) was an American photographer of the 19th century. Born in New York, he moved to California and quickly became interested in photography.