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  2. The Camera (American magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Camera_(American_magazine)

    Camera, originally the Society's gossip sheet, soon became a magazine and achieved national circulation. [1] Its articles catered to the amateur, being largely concerned with technical considerations and avoided the controversies over Pictorialism that occupied more serious publications of the period, though it reproduced work by accomplished Pictorialists, such as Leonard Misonne and Robert S ...

  3. Ema Spencer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ema_Spencer

    The Photographic Society of Philadelphia 1906 Fourteenth Annual Exhibition of the Photographic Salon London, UK 1907 Annual Member's Exhibition, New York Photo Club New York City, U.S. 1910 International Exhibition of Pictorial Photography Buffalo Fine Arts Academy, Albright Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY, U.S. 1911 International Exposition

  4. Robert S. Redfield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_S._Redfield

    A New England Landscape - c. 1900. Robert Stuart Redfield (2 May 1849 – 28 Apr 1921) was an American photographer from Philadelphia involved in pictorialism.He was a president of the Photographic Society of Philadelphia and a founding member of the Photo-Secession movement.

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  6. John Moran (photographer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Moran_(photographer)

    John Moran (February 1831 – February 19, 1902) was a pioneering American photographer and artist. Moran was a prominent landscape, architectural, astronomical and expedition photographer whose career began in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania area during the 1860s.

  7. Frederick Gutekunst - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Gutekunst

    Frederick Gutekunst (September 25, 1831 – April 27, 1917) was an American photographer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He opened his first photographic portrait studio with his brother in 1854 and successfully ran his business for sixty years.

  8. Frederic Eugene Ives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederic_Eugene_Ives

    He first demonstrated a system of natural color photography at the 1885 Novelties Exposition of the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. [5] [6] His fully developed Kromskop (long-vowel marks over both "o"s and pronounced "chrome-scope") color photography system was commercially available in England by late 1897 and in the US about a year later.

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