enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Documentary photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Documentary_photography

    This generation of documentary photographers is generally credited for codifying the documentary code of accuracy mixed with impassioned advocacy, with the goal of arousing public commitment to social change. [4] During the wartime and postwar eras, documentary photography increasingly became subsumed under the rubric of photojournalism.

  3. Norma I. Quintana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norma_I._Quintana

    Quintana began her career in documentary photography in the late 90s, attending Napa Valley College for a photography degree curriculum completed in 2001. She attended the Anderson Ranch Arts Center Photography Workshop with Shelby Lee Adams, and Maine Media Photography Workshop programs in Oaxaca, Mexico with both Mary Ellen Mark and Graciela Iturbide.

  4. Social documentary photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_documentary_photography

    Social documentary photography or concerned photography is the recording of what the world looks like, with a social and/or environmental focus. It is a form of documentary photography, with the aim to draw the public's attention to ongoing social issues. It may also refer to a socially critical genre of photography dedicated to showing the ...

  5. Direct cinema - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_Cinema

    Cinema in its ontological objectivity was seen by many viewers as reality captured and a means of universal education, as had been photography in its early period. Documentaries from the 1950s provide insight into the level of understanding that viewers of that day had of manipulation and mise-en-scène in films shot on "documentary sets ...

  6. Humanist photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanist_photography

    Humanist Photography, also known as the School of Humanist Photography, [1] manifests the Enlightenment philosophical system in social documentary practice based on a perception of social change. It emerged in the mid-twentieth-century and is associated most strongly with Europe, particularly France , [ 2 ] where the upheavals of the two world ...

  7. Documentary film - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Documentary_film

    This 16 mm Bolex "H16" reflex camera uses spring-wound type technology and has been an entry-level camera used in multiple film schools.. A documentary film (often described simply as a documentary) is a non-fictional motion picture intended to "document reality, primarily for instruction, education or maintaining a historical record". [1]

  8. A Native American photographer took powerful portraits of ...

    www.aol.com/native-american-photographer-took...

    The project has grown from a photo series to a documentary project to a full-blown archive of Native people, their communities, and their stories. Chief Bill James, Lummi Nation. Matika Wilbur

  9. Photojournalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photojournalism

    Photojournalism is distinguished from other close branches of photography (such as documentary photography, social documentary photography, war photography, street photography and celebrity photography) by having a rigid ethical framework which demands an honest and impartial approach that tells a story in strictly journalistic terms.