The father of modern photography, William Henry Fox Talbot (1800-77) developed the process by which photographic images could be reproduced, but he has yet to be sufficiently appreciated as a photographer in his own right. Over his photographic career he made more than 5,000 images which included fascinating pictures of his home Lacock Abbey, portraits of his family and friends, and still-lifes of botanical specimens, cloth and household objects. A key intellectual figure of the nineteenth century working in science, mathematics, astronomy, politics and archaeology, he is arguably the most important figure in the invention of photography. His practice established many of the medium's most familiar genres and he was devoted to the the advancement of photography, publishing the first photographically illustrated book, The Pencil of Nature, in 1844-46 to reveal the potential of the medium to a wider audience. This monograph features many of Talbot's best-known landscapes made around Lacock Abbey and some of the first negatives of the ever made, but it also includes lesser-known and previously unpublished work that reveals the extraordinary diverse scope of his work. His photographs reflect and embody the social and cultural issues of the time, but they are also fascinating, often beautiful, images that are still engaging today.
Anthologies of photographs are indexed by photographer, subject, and named individuals in portraits.
Douglas Johnson: Southwest Traditions and Modern Icons
The connection between all the rhetoric and all the poetry, between the words of a Black Panther and those of a rock star or a pacifist, between the scars of a pop artist and those of a napalm victim, have haunted and informed the ...
... 空间科学研究所(SSI)封底:美国宇航局(NASA),美国地质勘探局(USGS)第4页:美国宇航局(NASA),M·贾斯丁·威尔金森(M. Justin Wilkinson),德克萨斯州立大学(Texas State University),美国宇航局(NASA)约翰逊航天中心(JSC)工作人员雅各布(Jacobs Contract) ...
Although Evans and Christenberry share many of the same subjects and concerns, there is a dramatic difference to the meaning of their work.
But Lawler is also an old-fashioned "artist's artist," long overdue for the kind of serious reconsideration and recognition that this volume affords.
During the late 1960s and 70s, a paradigm shift occurred within visual culture: photography and the moving image were absorbed into critical art practices. In particular, these mediums were used...
This book presents for the first time a selection of Imes's elegant, formally balanced black-and-white images, recorded over nearly twenty years, of local people, river baptisms, black baseball teams, backyards,...
Describes the federal expeditions Hillers accompanied to the American West
A groundbreaking book, the only volume of first-class reproductions of Lewis Carroll's photographs.Published on the one hundredth anniversary of the death of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (Lewis Carroll), Reflections in a...