"Photography: The Whole Story" Juliet Hacking Download "Pdf" UPDATED

"Photography: The Whole Story" Juliet Hacking Download "Pdf"

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Leap to navigation Jump to search

List of street photographers

This is a listing of notable street photographers. Street photography is photography conducted for fine art or enquiry that presents unmediated take a chance encounters and random incidents[ane] within public places. Street photography does not need the properties of a street or fifty-fifty an urban environment. Though people are ordinarily nowadays, street photography may lack people and can be of an object or environs where the image projects a decidedly homo grapheme in facsimile or aesthetic.[2]

Street photographers [edit]

  • Jun Abe (1955–)[3]
  • Berenice Abbott (1898–1991)[four]
  • Christophe Agou (1969–2015)[five] [due north one]
  • Daniel Arnold[vi]
  • John Benton-Harris (1939–)[seven]
  • Richard Bram (1952–)[eight]
  • Lola Álvarez Bravo (1903–1993)[9]
  • Manuel Álvarez Bravo (1902–2002)[10]
  • Blake Andrews (1968–)[xi]
  • Emmy Andriesse (1914–1953)[12]
  • Nobuyoshi Araki (1940–)[13] [n two]
  • Diane Arbus (1923–1971)[northward 3] [14]
  • Eugène Atget (1857–1927)[15]
  • Alice Austen (1866–1952)[16]
  • Narelle Autio (1969–)[due north i]
  • Shirley Baker (1932–2014) [17] [18]
  • James Barnor (1929–)[19]
  • Ruth-Marion Baruch (1922–1997)[n 3]
  • Gianni Berengo Gardin (1930–)[20]
  • Lou Bernstein (1911–2005)[21]
  • Valentine Blanchard (1831–1901)[22]
  • Dorothy Bohm (1924–)[23] [24]
  • Boogie (1969–)[25]
  • David Bradford (1951–)[26]
  • Adrian Bradshaw (1964-)[27]
  • Beak Brandt (1904–1983)[28]
  • Brassaï (1899–1984)[fifteen]
  • Giacomo Brunelli (1977–)[29]
  • Harry Callahan (1912–1999)[xxx]
  • Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908–2004)[15]
  • Vivian Ruddy (1920–2019[31] [32]
  • Marking Cohen (1943–)[33]
  • Joan Colom (1921–2017)[34]
  • Martha Cooper (1943–)[35]
  • Ted Croner (1922–2005)[36]
  • Bill Cunningham (1929–2016)[37]
  • Maciej Dakowicz (1976–)[n 1]
  • Neb Dane (1938–)[38]
  • Bruce Davidson (1933–)[xiv] [n 3]
  • Peter Dench (1972–)[39]
  • Raymond Depardon (1942–)[29]
  • Philip-Lorca diCorcia (1951–)[n 2]
  • Robert Doisneau (1912–1994)[40]
  • Ken Domon (1909–1990)[41]
  • Don Donaghy (1936–2008)[42]
  • Terence Donovan (1936–1996)[north ii]
  • Eamonn Doyle (1969–)[43]
  • Carolyn Drake (1971–)[n one]
  • Nikos Economopoulos (1953–)[44]
  • William Eggleston (1939–)[north 2]
  • Melanie Einzig (1967–)[n 1]
  • Alfred Eisenstaedt (1898–1995)[45]
  • Martin Elkort (1929–2016)[46]
  • Ed van der Elsken (1925–1990)[47]
  • Morris Engel (1918–2005)[48]
  • Elliott Erwitt (1928–)[49]
  • Walker Evans (1903–1975)[15]
  • Louis Faurer (1916–2001)[50]
  • Harold Feinstein (1931–2015)[51]
  • Jed Fielding (1953–)[52]
  • Armet Francis (1945–)[53]
  • Robert Frank (1924–2019)[15] [n 3]
  • Jill Freedman (1939–2019)[54]
  • Lee Friedlander (1934–)[55] [northward 3]
  • Cristina García Rodero (1949-)
  • William Gedney (1932–1989)[56]
  • George Georgiou (1961–)[n 1]
  • David Gibson (1957–)[n 1]
  • Bruce Gilden (1946–)[north one]
  • Shigeo Gochō (1946–1983)[57]
  • Henry Grant (1907–2004)[58]
  • Ken Grant (1967–)[59]
  • Michelle Groskopf[threescore]
  • Sid Grossman (1913–1955)[61]
  • Ara Güler (1928–2018)[62]
  • John Gutmann (1905–1998)[63]
  • George Hallett (1942–2020)[64]
  • Hiroshi Hamaya (1915–1999)[65]
  • Siegfried Hansen (1961–)[due north i]
  • John Harding (1940–)[38] [66]
  • Tadahiko Hayashi (1918–1990)[67]
  • Dave Heath (1931–2016)[68] [69]
  • Nigel Henderson (1917–1985)[n 2]
  • Anthony Hernandez (1947–)[fourteen] [38]
  • Fred Herzog (1930–2019)[70] [71]
  • Fan Ho (1931–2016)[72]
  • Thomas Hoepker (1936–)[73]
  • Yasuhiro Ishimoto (1921–2012)[74]
  • Walter Joseph (1922–2003)[75]
  • James Jowers (1939–2009)[76]
  • Richard Kalvar (1944–)[north 1]
  • Osamu Kanemura (1964–)[n 1]
  • Peter Kayafas (1971–)[77]
  • Neil Kenlock (1950–)[53]
  • André Kertész (1894–1985)[15]
  • Hiroh Kikai (1945–)[78]
  • Ihei Kimura (1901–1974)[79]
  • Keizō Kitajima (1954–)[80]
  • William Klein (1928–)[north 2] [81]
  • Martin Kollar (1971–)[n i]
  • Josef Koudelka (1938–)[82]
  • Seiji Kurata (1945–2020)[83]
  • Kineo Kuwabara (1913–2007)[84]
  • Dorothea Lange (1895–1965)[85]
  • Sergio Larrain (1931–2012)[86]
  • Jacques-Henri Lartigue (1894–1986)[15]
  • Jens Olof Lasthein (1964–)[n i]
  • Nikki S. Lee (1970–)[n 2]
  • Arthur Leipzig (1918–2014)[87]
  • Saul Leiter (1923–2013)[88]
  • Rebecca Lepkoff (1916–2014)[89]
  • Leon Levinstein (1910–1988)[90]
  • Helen Levitt (1913–2009)[14] [91]
  • Feng Li (1971–)[92] [93]
  • Jerome Liebling (1924–2011)[94]
  • David Lurie (1951–)[95]
  • Markéta Luskačová (1944–)[xviii]
  • Jon Luvelli (1979-)[96]
  • Danny Lyon (1942–)[n 3]
  • Vivian Maier (1926–2009)[97]
  • Jesse Marlow (1978–)[due north 1]
  • Mary Ellen Mark (1940–2015)[98]
  • Roger Mayne (1929–2014)[99]
  • Paul McDonough (born 1941)[100]
  • Stephen McLaren[n 1] [101]
  • Susan Meiselas (1948–)[northward ii]
  • Jeff Mermelstein (1957–)[n ane]
  • Joel Meyerowitz (1938–)[north 1] [55]
  • Xavier Miserachs (1937–1998)[102]
  • Lisette Model (1901–1983)[103]
  • Mimi Mollica (1975–)[n 1]
  • Daidō Moriyama (1938–)[n 2] [104]
  • Shigeichi Nagano (1925–2019)[105]
  • Masatoshi Naitō (1938–)[106]
  • Charles Nègre (1820–1880)[107]
  • Horace Nicholls (1867–1941)[108]
  • Colin O'Brien (1940–2016)[109]
  • Hildegard Ochse (1935–1997)[110]
  • Takayuki Ogawa (1938–2008)[111]
  • Mitsugu Ōnishi (1952–)[112]
  • Catherine Opie (1961–)[n two]
  • Ruth Orkin (1921–1985)[113]
  • Graham Ovenden (1943–)[114]
  • Homer Page (1918–1985)[115]
  • Trent Parke (1971–)[north i]
  • Martin Parr (1952–)[due north 1]
  • Charlie Phillips (1944–)[18] [116]
  • Gus Powell (1974–)[due north 1] [117]
  • Mark Powell (1968–)[n 1]
  • Raghu Rai (1942–)[n 1] [29]
  • Tony Ray-Jones (1941–1972)[118]
  • Marc Riboud (1923–2016)[119]
  • Henri Rivière (1864–1951)[107]
  • Willy Ronis (1910–2009)[120]
  • Paul Russell (1966–)[121] [n 1]
  • Edward Linley Sambourne (1844–1910)[122]
  • Boris Savelev (1948–)[n ane]
  • Tazio Secchiaroli (1925–1998)[n 2]
  • Allan Sekula (1951–2013)[north two]
  • Craig Semetko (1961–)[123]
  • Jamel Shabazz (1960–)[124]
  • Raghubir Singh (1942–1999)[north ii]
  • Aaron Siskind (1903–1991)[125]
  • Gary Mark Smith (1956–)[ commendation needed ]
  • David Solomons (1965–)[126]
  • Terry Spencer (1918–2009)[127]
  • Chris Steele-Perkins (1947–)[29]
  • Fred Stein (1909–1967)[128]
  • Joel Sternfeld (1944–)
  • Louis Stettner (1922–2016)[129]
  • Alfred Stieglitz (1864–1946)[107]
  • Gary Stochl (1947–)[130]
  • Paul Strand (1890–1976)[131]
  • Shell Streuli (1957–)[north 2]
  • Christer Strömholm (1918–2002)[132]
  • Matt Stuart (1974–)[n 1]
  • Thomas Struth (1954–)[n 2]
  • Issei Suda (1940–2019)[133]
  • Wolfgang Suschitzky (1912–2016)[134]
  • Michael Ernest Sweet (1979–)[135]
  • Homer Sykes (1949–)[136]
  • Yutaka Takanashi (1935–)[137]
  • Takeyoshi Tanuma (1929–)[138]
  • Sam Tata (1911–2005)[139]
  • Elsa Thiemann (1910–1981)[140]
  • John Thomson (1837–1921)[141]
  • Wolfgang Tillmans (1968–)[due north ii]
  • Alexey Titarenko (1962–)[north 1]
  • Toyoko Tokiwa (1928–2019)[142]
  • Lars Tunbjörk (1956–2015)[n 1]
  • Peter Turnley (1955–)[143]
  • Nick Turpin (1969–)[144] [n 1]
  • Stephan Vanfleteren (1969–)[145]
  • David Vestal (1924–2013)[146]
  • Roman Vishniac (1897–1990)[147]
  • Jeff Wall (1946–)[n 1] [n 2]
  • Dougie Wallace (1953-)[148]
  • Munem Wasif (1983–)[n ane]
  • Alex Webb (1952–)[n one]
  • Weegee (1899–1968)[149]
  • Henry Wessel (1942–2018)[38]
  • William Whiffin (1878–1957)[150]
  • Garry Winogrand (1928–1984)[n 2] [55] [n three]
  • Ernest Withers (1922–2007)[n 3]
  • Michael Wolf (1954–2019)[n 1]
  • Tom Wood (1951–)[eighteen]
  • Michio Yamauchi (1950–)[151]
  • Nakaji Yasui (1903–1942)[152]
  • Yau Leung (1941–1997)[153]
  • Bernard Pierre Wolff (1930–1985)[154]
  • Max Yavno (1911–1985)[155]
  • Heinrich Zille (1858–1929)[156]

See also [edit]

  • List of photographers
  • List of photojournalists

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d eastward f g h i j k l m due north o p q r southward t u 5 w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Work past this photographer is presented in Sophie Howarth and Stephen McLaren, eds, Street Photography At present (London: Thames & Hudson, 2010, ISBN 978-0-500-54393-ane; London: Thames & Hudson, 2011, ISBN 978-0-500-28907-5). The complete list of photographers introduced: Christophe Agou, Gary Alexander, Arif Aşçı, Narelle Autio, Bang Byoung-Sang, Polly Braden, Maciej Dakowicz, Carolyn Drake, Melanie Einzig, Peter Funch, George Georgiou, David Gibson, Bruce Gilden, Thierry Girard, Andrew Glickman, Siegfried Hansen, Cristóbal Hara, Markus Hartel, Nils Jorgensen, Richard Kalvar, Osamu Kanemura, Martin Kollar, Jens Olof Lasthein, Frederic Lezmi, Stephen McLaren, Jesse Marlow, Mirko Martin, Jeff Mermelstein, Joel Meyerowitz, Mimi Mollica, Trent Parke, Martin Parr, Gus Powell, Mark Alor Powell, Bruno Quinquet, Raghu Rai, Paul Russell, Boris Savelev, Otto Snoek, Matt Stuart, Ying Tang, Alexey Titarenko, Nick Turpin, Lars Tunbjörk, Jeff Wall, Munem Wasif, Alex Webb, Richard Wentworth, Amani Willett, Michael Wolf, Artem Zhitenev, Wolfgang Zurborn. Run into "The volume Archived 2017-02-11 at the Wayback Machine", Street Photography Now Projection.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Work by this photographer is presented in Kerry Brougher and Russell Ferguson, eds, Open City: Street Photographs since 1950 (Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz, 2001, ISBN 9783775710664; Oxford: Museum of Mod Art, 2001, ISBN 9781901352122); a book accompanying exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, May–July 2001; The Lowry, Manchester, October 2001 – Jan 2002; Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC, June–September 2002. The photographers introduced: Nobuyoshi Araki, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Terence Donovan, William Eggleston, Nigel Henderson, William Klein, Nikki Lee, Susan Meiselas, Daidō Moriyama, Catherine Opie, Tazio Secchiaroli, Allan Sekula, Raghubir Singh, Beat out Streuli, Thomas Struth, Wolfgang Tillmans, Jeff Wall, Garry Winogrand.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Work past this lensman is presented in Deborah Klochko and Andy Grundberg, eds, Streetwise: Masters of 60s Photography (San Francisco: Modernbook, 2010, ISBN 978-1-878062-00-0). The complete listing of photographers introduced: Diane Arbus, Ruth-Marion Baruch, Jerry Berndt, Bruce Davidson, Robert Frank, Lee Friedlander, Danny Lyon, Garry Winogrand, Ernest Withers. The book accompanied an exhibition at the Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego, February–May 2011. See W. S. Di Piero, "The way we were Archived 2017-02-20 at the Wayback Motorcar", San Diego Reader, 11 May 2011; Barbara Schreiber, "Depth of field: Streetwise: Masters of 60s Photography Archived 2017-02-20 at the Wayback Auto", Artistic Loafing Charlotte, 6 December 2011.

References [edit]

  1. ^ Warner Marien, Mary (2012). 100 ideas that changed photography. London: Laurence Rex Publishing. p. 169. ISBN978-1-85669-793-four.
  2. ^ Colin Westerbeck. Bystander: A History of Street Photography. Little, Brown and Company, 1994.
  3. ^ "Masters of photography gather in new festival in Beşiktaş", Today's Zaman, 19 October 2014, as archived past the Wayback Machine on 9 February 2016. "20-8 renowned photographers from around the earth, including . . . Japanese street photographer Jun Abe, are foreign guests of [Fotoistanbul, the First Beşiktaş International Festival of Photography]".
  4. ^ Erika Lederman, "Street Photography", pp. 288–291 of Juliet Hacking, ed., Photography: The Whole Story (New York: Prestel, 2012; ISBN 978-iii-7913-4734-9). "Using acute angles and a graphic style to capture the poetry in the relationship between the old and new New York, Abbott created intensely subjective images with a Surrealist middle. . . ."
  5. ^ Rachel Lowry, "In memoriam: Remembering the photographers we lost in 2015 Archived 2017-09-13 at the Wayback Machine", fourth dimension.com, 31 Dec 2015. Agou is described as a "French documentary photographer and street photographer living in NYC". Accessed 9 Feb 2017.
  6. ^ "On the Prowl With Instagram's Ultimate Street Lensman". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2021-07-09 – via www.wired.com.
  7. ^ "The photographer documenting the eccentricities of London street life". Huck Mag. 3 September 2021. Retrieved 2021-09-28 . With the recent publication of Walking London 1965-1988 (Café Royal Books), Benton-Harris looks back at iii decades of street photography and street portraiture.
  8. ^ Rosenberg, David (4 September 2016). "This New York Street Photographer Took xxx,000 Images in a Decade". Slate. Archived from the original on 12 October 2017. Retrieved 11 Oct 2017.
  9. ^ "Lola Alvarez Bravo Archived 2017-02-11 at the Wayback Machine" (exhibition discover), Aperture Foundation, 2006. "Alvarez Bravo was a photojournalist, portraitist, and street photographer. . . ." Accessed eleven Feb 2017.
  10. ^ Pilar Caballero-Alías, "The unexpected Surrealist: Manuel Álvarez Bravo's photopoetry Archived 2017-02-12 at the Wayback Machine", Latin American Research Centre, University of Calgary. "Photographs of quirky shapes or word-image games encountered in everyday street life allow us to revisit Manuel Álvarez Bravo's photography and read his photographs according to Surrealist bounds. . . ." Accessed eleven Feb 2017.
  11. ^ Aline Smithson, "Common ground: New American street photography at drkrm Archived 2017-02-xi at the Wayback Automobile", Lenscratch, 8 July 2013. Andrews is described equally ane of 5 "highly-accomplished American street photographers". Accessed 9 Feb 2017.
  12. ^ Anneke van Veen, "'I saw a plastic bag': Photography and urbanism, 1852–2000." Affiliate four of Frits Giertsberg, et al, Dutch Eyes: A Disquisitional History of Photography in the Netherlands (Zwolle: Uitgeverij Waanders, 2007; ISBN 978-xc-400-8380-8). "In the 1930s Emmy Andriesse was the starting time of a new generation of humanistic photographers to brand and annals contact with the passers-past they photographed and thus produce sensitive street portraits" (p 284).
  13. ^ Kaori Shoji, "Photographic portal to a secret, bygone world Archived 2017-02-xi at the Wayback Machine", Japan Times, 14 October 2015. "Araki has retained a particular love for street photography. At present 75, he notwithstanding loves to cruise around the streets of Shinjuku and Ikebukuro with his old camera." Accessed x February 2017.
  14. ^ a b c d Carolina A. Miranda, "Photography's all-time-kept surreptitious: How Anthony Hernandez put a distinctly Los Angeles lens on picture-making Archived 2017-02-16 at the Wayback Machine", Los Angeles Times, 23 September 2016. "For much of the 20th century, street photography was often associated with the dense cities of Europe and the Northeastern United States — particularly New York, where figures such as Diane Arbus, Bruce Davidson and Helen Levitt elevated the deed of the impromptu street shot into high fine art. But Hernandez — now 69, and looking stately with a crown of white hair — helped requite the form a distinctly Los Angeles cast." Accessed xvi Feb 2017.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Sean O'Hagan, "Why street photography is facing a moment of truth Archived 2017-02-11 at the Wayback Machine", The Guardian, 18 April 2010. "[M]whatsoever of the great pioneers of photography – Eugène Atget, Brassai, André Kertész, Jacques Henri Lartigue, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Walker Evans and Robert Frank – could all be considered street photographers of one kind or another. . . ." Accessed 10 February 2017.
  16. ^ Sarah Goodyear, "The original New York street photographer Archived 2017-02-11 at the Wayback Machine", CityLab, 26 July 2013. "[Austen] took thousands of pictures, from formal portraits to candid street shots, collecting many of the latter into an 1894 portfolio called 'Street Types of New York'. The 'Street Types' were in essence her guided tour to the urban center's human festival, depicting fishmongers, policemen, pocketknife-grinders, and dozens of other characters that could exist institute on the metropolis's teeming sidewalks." Accessed 11 February 2017.
  17. ^ "Laughter in the slums: the best work of street photographer Shirley Baker – in pictures Archived 2017-02-11 at the Wayback Machine", The Guardian, viii October 2014. Accessed 10 February 2017.
  18. ^ a b c d "A view through the urban eye of Charlie Phillips at Nottingham's New Art Commutation Archived 2017-02-22 at the Wayback Machine", Culture24, 19 April 2013. "'[Charlie Phillips'southward] piece of work is equally significant every bit great chroniclers of everyday street life,' [Paul Goodwin] says, comparing the artist with eastern Europe observer Markéta Luskačová, 1960s northern documenter Shirley Bakery and Tom Forest. . . . Accessed 21 February 2017.
  19. ^ Colin Pantall, "James Barnor: Ever Young Archived 2017-02-12 at the Wayback Machine", Colin Pantall's blog, 17 November 2015. "[Barnor's volume] Ever Young is an eclectic mix of studio portraits, printing images, mode and street photography and a wide introduction to how photography was used and expanded in Republic of ghana and beyond." Accessed 12 Feb 2017.
  20. ^ "Gianni Berengo Gardin: Vera Fotografia Archived 2017-02-20 at the Wayback Car", Rome Museum Guide, 2016. "[Berengo Gardin] tells the story of political and social changes that accept marked the history of the country, as well as providing images of life on the streets and accidental encounters." Accessed 19 Feb 2017.
  21. ^ David Gonzalez, "Reprising the storefront gallery of the greats Archived 2015-10-05 at the Wayback Machine", The New York Times, eight January 2014. "That commencement show [past Larry Siegel in the Image Gallery] was a written report in contrasts — Mr. [Lou] Bernstein's street photographs and Mr. [Fred] Plaut's photos of musicians signed to Columbia Records." Accessed 12 Feb 2017.
  22. ^ "London Street Photography", Museum of London, 2011, archived by the Wayback Machine on 22 March 2011. Blanchard "[produced] the kickoff photographs of busy city streets in which everything in motion was arrested in abrupt definition".
  23. ^ John Gulliver, "How photographer Dorothy is still snapping the streets at 93 Archived 2017-03-02 at the Wayback Machine", Camden New Journal, 21 April 2016. "Known over the years every bit a 'street photographer', . . ." Accessed 2 March 2017.
  24. ^ Dorothy Bohm, quoted in Alice Eastward. Vincent, "Dorothy Bohm interview: 'I recall every photo I accept' Archived 2017-03-03 at the Wayback Machine", Huffington Mail, 22 Nov 2012. "When I'k chosen a street photographer I think it's quite insulting, but that's ok." Accessed 2 March 2017.
  25. ^ Mikko Takkunen, "PJL: July 2013 (Part 1)", Time Lightbox, eight July 2013. "Serbian photographer Boogie, known for his street photography from all over the earth, . . ." Accessed 6 March 2017.
  26. ^ "Bulldoze by shootings: NYC movies in 15 seconds Archived 2017-03-12 at the Wayback Machine", Jack Shainman Gallery. "A New York City taxi driver by trade, Bradford has developed his practice behind the bike of his cab, shooting New York's streets for the past fifteen years." Accessed 11 March 2017.
  27. ^ "Street photography reveals China in the 1980s". BBC News. 8 August 2019. Archived from the original on eight Baronial 2019. Retrieved 9 Baronial 2019.
  28. ^ Erika Lederman, "Street Photography", pp. 288–291 of Juliet Hacking, ed., Photography: The Whole Story (New York: Prestel, 2012; ISBN 978-3-7913-4734-nine). "London was the master setting of the street photographs of Bill Brandt. . . ."
  29. ^ a b c d Sean O'Hagan, "Right Here, Correct Now: Photography snatched off the streets Archived 2016-eleven-26 at the Wayback Machine", The Guardian, 8 March 2011. "[T]he theme [of the Format exhibition is] a timely one: gimmicky street photography from around the globe. / The lineup is strong: Chris Steele-Perkins'southward intimate portraits of Tokyo street life; Raghu Rai's vibrant images of Bharat'due south teeming cities; Raymond Depardon's outsider's view of Manhattan in the 1980s; Giacomo Brunelli'due south frequently unsettling shots of animals in the urban jungle. Aslope contemporary street photographers such as Alex Webb and Polly Braden, Format has besides attracted 2 masters of the genre to Derby: Joel Meyerowitz and Bruce Gilden, . . ." Accessed 2 March 2017.
  30. ^ "Harry Callahan: The Street Archived 2017-06-06 at the Wayback Machine", Vancouver Fine art Gallery "[The exhibition] Harry Callahan: The Street features 140 of these blackness and white and color images, which Callahan fabricated in the streets of Chicago, New York, Atlanta, Cairo, Mexico, Portugal and Wales. . . ." Accessed 2 March 2017.
  31. ^ Glueck, Grace (sixteen June 2000). "ART IN REVIEW; Vivian Ruddy". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-12-08 – via NYTimes.com. A fast eye, a quick mind and a speedy shutter are essentials for a good street photographer, a brood of movie taker with which Vivian Crimson proudly identifies.
  32. ^ Sandomir, Richard (xiv March 2019). "Vivian Blood-red, 98, Socially Aware Street Photographer, Is Dead". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-12-08 – via NYTimes.com. Ms. Cherry's curiosity most people's lives, inspired by the artistry of photographers like Dorothea Lange, Helen Levitt and Paul Strand, brought her to the city'south streets to take finely observed pictures of immigrants, street vendors, bocce players, construction workers, fruit auctioneers, farriers shoeing Central Park carriage horses, and children watching in anaesthesia as an airplane flew overhead.
  33. ^ Max Campbell, "Mark Cohen'south shut-up street photography Archived 2017-02-12 at the Wayback Machine", New Yorker, 11 May 2016. Accessed 12 February 2017.
  34. ^ Eduardo Cadava and Gabriela Nouzeilles, "In depth: The itinerant languages of photography Archived 2017-02-12 at the Wayback Motorcar", Princeton University Art Museum. "The tertiary section, 'Itinerant Subjects,' [of the exhibition The Itinerant Languages of Photography] . . . draws materials from the Fundación Foto Colectania in Barcelona and for the get-go time introduces to the American public the work of the street photographer Joan Colom. . . ." Accessed 12 February 2017.
  35. ^ "Graffiti, Games and Hip-Hop Culture: Finding Fine art on the Street", The New York Times, April 18, 2017. Accessed 4 August 2017.
  36. ^ "The streets of New York: American photographs from the collection, 1938–1958" (PDF), National Gallery of Art. "Ted Croner's boldly graphic images of New York skyscrapers, speeding taxis, and cafeterias evoke the dynamism but likewise the desolation of modernistic urban life." Accessed 26 February 2017.
  37. ^ Collins, Lauren (16 March 2009). "Man on the Street: Bill Cunningham Takes Manhattan". The New Yorker: 50. OCLC 423290672. Archived from the original on 28 Baronial 2012. Retrieved 5 September 2012.
  38. ^ a b c d Susan Kismaric, California Photography: Remaking Make-Believe (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1989; ISBN 0-87070-183-v), p. xv. "[T]he tradition of 'street photography', and then prominent in the history of [photography], is practically nonexistent in California. It has been taken upwards by only a few younger photographers, namely Henry Wessel, John Harding, and Bill Dane in San Francisco, and Anthony Hernandez, who photographs Rodeo Drive." Bachelor here Archived 2019-02-13 at the Wayback Auto on the MoMA website. Accessed 12 Feb 2019.
  39. ^ "Nominations for Street Photography award Archived 2017-02-12 at the Wayback Motorcar", Academy of Brighton, xv Baronial 2013. Dench is described as a "celebrated street photographer". Accessed 12 Feb 2017.
  40. ^ Jorre Both, "Robert Doisneau: Primary street photographer Archived 2017-02-12 at the Wayback Machine", GUP, 24 July 2013. Accessed 12 Feb 2017.
  41. ^ "Ken Domon: Dual perspectives Archived 2017-12-26 at the Wayback Machine", Fujifilm Square, 2014. "Domon initially rose to prominence with his prewar photo collection 'Children of Izu', depicting the vitality and dogged spirit of children from the Izu area playing together in the streets despite their straitened circumstances." Accessed 12 Feb 2017.
  42. ^ Rachel Beckman, "A sinuous bridge over a cultural divide Archived 2016-09-17 at the Wayback Machine", Washington Post, twenty July 2006. "Don Donaghy was 1 of New York's famous street photographers in the 1960s." Accessed 12 February 2017.
  43. ^ O'Hagan, Sean (six Baronial 2015). "Dubliners: Eamonn Doyle's palpable portraits of a city lost in thought". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 5 May 2018. Retrieved 2018-05-02 . When Eamonn Doyle self-published his debut, i, last year, Martin Parr declared it "the all-time street photobook in a decade."
  44. ^ "Nikos Economopoulos Archived 2017-02-14 at the Wayback Machine", Lugano Photo Days, 2016. "He photographed whatsoever he came beyond on his daily walks: street scenes, public gatherings, lone meanderers, or deserted landscapes." Accessed 12 February 2017.
  45. ^ "Il racconto della strada attraverso scatti rubati ai passanti Archived 2017-02-13 at the Wayback Automobile", La Repubblica Roma, 9 May 2015. "E se gli stili di ogni fotografo sono diversi, il filo rosso che unisce le quattro produzioni è fifty'obiettivo di fare della strada il palcoscenico di storie senza inizio né fine, da legare tra loro con l'immaginazione, sulla scia dei maestri della 'street photography', tra Europa due east Stati Uniti, da Alfred Eisenstaedt a Henry Cartier-Bresson, da Robert Frank a Vivian Maier, fino all'americano Saul Leiter." Accessed 12 February 2017.
  46. ^ James Ricci, "From 400 negatives, something pretty positive Archived 2014-03-18 at the Wayback Motorcar", Los Angeles Times, 29 July 2001. "What stirred [Elkort] was wandering the streets of New York City and capturing the images of ordinary people – children, shopkeepers, needle-merchandise workers – as they moved through the landscapes of their lives." Accessed 13 February 2017.
  47. ^ Anneke van Veen, "'I saw a plastic bag': Photography and urbanism, 1852–2000." Chapter 4 of Frits Giertsberg, et al, Dutch Eyes: A Critical History of Photography in the netherlands (Zwolle: Uitgeverij Waanders, 2007; ISBN 978-90-400-8380-8). "Van der Elsken never tired of watching people and continued to genuinely wonder at the fullness of life enacted on the streets . . ." (p 284).
  48. ^ Bergan, Ronald (eleven May 2005). "Morris Engel". The Guardian. Archived from the original on three March 2017. He became fascinated with photography at the age of nine and, in his teens, signed upwards for a $6 course at the Photo League and began roaming the streets of New York with his camera
  49. ^ Kenneth Bakery, "Photographer shows depth of focus / Elliott Erwitt'south piece of work ranges from news to dog portraiture Archived 2017-02-13 at the Wayback Machine", San Francisco Chronicle, "Keen observation of the street and lucky timing marker Erwitt'southward best pictures." Accessed xiii February 2017.
  50. ^ Margaret Loke, "Louis Faurer, lensman who captured compelling images of the street, dies at 84 Archived 2017-02-11 at the Wayback Machine", The New York Times, 12 March 2001. Faurer "pushed photography in an annihilation-goes direction in the 1940s and 50s, producing images taken on city streets that were raw, tender and oft melancholy. . . . His offhand style of street photography has been more than commonly associated with Robert Frank."
  51. ^ Rachel Lowry, "In memoriam: Remembering the photographers we lost in 2015 Archived 2017-09-13 at the Wayback Machine", time.com, 31 December 2015. Feinstein is described as "a prominent figure in the New York City street photography scene". Accessed 9 February 2017.
  52. ^ Naomi Rosenblum, "Documentary Photography, Past and Present," essay from Photography's Multiple Roles: Fine art, Document, Marketplace, Science, Denise Miller, editor (Chicago: Museum of Contemporary Photography, Columbia College; and New York: D.A.P., Distributed Fine art Publishers, Inc., 1998).[1] "Since [his get-go trip to Naples, Italy in 1977], Fielding has returned nigh every twelvemonth to this urban center, which has get his main focus, to record the particularities of its street life...In the end, his photographs clearly prove a mastery of the photographic concept of framing, and evoke a portrait of the urban center by focusing on the forms, activities, and passions of its people."
  53. ^ a b Jilke Golbach (16 Oct 2019). "Photographing black Britain: Neil Kenlock & Armet Francis". Museum of London. Retrieved xi November 2021. Neil Kenlock and Armet Francis were two radical figures, who took their cameras onto the streets of N Kensington equally function of a wider commitment to documenting the lives of African-Caribbean area people across London and across.
  54. ^ Niko Koppel, "Through Weegee's lens Archived 2018-01-06 at the Wayback Car", The New York Times, 27 April 2008. ". . . Jill Freedman . . . trained her lens on the spirited characters and gritty sidewalks of a now-extinct metropolis. . . . [She] captured raw and intimate images, and transformed urban scenes into theatrical dramas." Accessed 6 March 2017.
  55. ^ a b c Sean O'Hagan, "Why street photography is facing a moment of truth Archived 2017-02-11 at the Wayback Machine", The Guardian, 18 April 2010. "Back in the 1960s, when New York was the heart of street photography, the master practitioners of the class would sometimes cantankerous paths. Lee Friedlander was friends with Garry Winogrand who often met Joel Meyerowitz as they crisscrossed Manhattan and across on the prowl for pictures that caught the urban center's tempo, its myriad everyday dramas, and its citizens at work and at play." Accessed 10 February 2017.
  56. ^ "Guide to the William Gedney photographs and papers, 1887, 1940s-1992 and undated, bulk 1955-1989 Archived 2017-01-13 at the Wayback Machine", Duke Academy. "The materials [by Gedney in Duke University library] reveal Gedney's intense dedication to his work, and his involvement in street photography, portraiture, night photography, creative composition, and the report of human nature. " Accessed 16 February 2017.
  57. ^ "Gocho Shigeo: from the series Familiar Street Scenes Archived 2017-02-16 at the Wayback Machine", Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. "In [Familiar Street Scenes, Gochō] sought out fleeting formal patterns in the bustle and flow of the streets of downtown Tokyo. . . ." Accessed 16 February 2017.
  58. ^ "London Street Photography", Museum of London, 2011, archived by the Wayback Machine on 22 March 2011. Grant is described as having "a profound interest in the everyday lives of ordinary peoples. He photographed London'south changing streets from the 1950s to the 1980s".
  59. ^ Sean O'Hagan, "No Pain Whatsoever review: Ken Grant's photographs of wasted Liverpool Archived 2017-02-13 at the Wayback Motorcar", The Observer, eleven May 2014. "You often feel the mix of energy and attentiveness in his work, which now amounts to an extensive visual certificate of life on the streets of Liverpool since the mid-1980s." Accessed 12 Feb 2017.
  60. ^ Fletcher, Gemma (2019-05-28). "Exposure: Lensman Michelle Groskopf". Creative Review . Retrieved 2021-06-04 . {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  61. ^ "Grossman, Sid: American, 1913–1955 Archived 2017-02-17 at the Wayback Machine", National Gallery of Art. "[I]in 1939 [Grossman] worked on a series that documented street life in Harlem. . . ." Accessed 16 Feb 2017.
  62. ^ "New documentary on Ara Güler debuts in Istanbul Archived 2017-02-nineteen at the Wayback Machine", Hürriyet Daily News, 15 March 2016. The writer Doğan Hızlan [Wikidata] is quoted as saying: "[Güler] has photographed all of Istanbul, but how? He has photographed the poor neighborhoods, the side streets of Istanbul, the places that are not shown. . . ." Accessed 19 Feb 2017.
  63. ^ Sandra S. Phillips, "John Gutmann: Culture Stupor". In The Photography of John Gutmann: Culture Shock (London: Merrell, 2000; ISBN i-85894-097-4 [hardback]; ISBN 1-85894-099-0 [paperback]). "Later Gutmann began to teach at San Francisco Land University in 1938, he had less fourth dimension to pursue street photography as freely as when he first arrived in [the Us]" (p. 36).
  64. ^ Lindsay Johns, "Photographer George Hallett Captures the 'Dignity' of Apartheid", The Root, 26 April 2014; as archived by the Wayback Machine on 22 May 2014. "Hallett is the street photographer par excellence who captures dazzler, joy and resilience in his predominantly working-form, Coloured Greatcoat Town subjects."
  65. ^ "Japan's modern split up: Hiroshi Hamaya Archived 2017-02-17 at the Wayback Auto", J. Paul Getty Museum, 2013. "Built-in and raised in Tokyo, Hiroshi Hamaya . . . . began his career documenting that city from the air and the street. . . . ." Accessed 17 February 2017.
  66. ^ Sally Eauclaire, ed, American Independents: Xviii Colour Photographers (New York: Abbeville, 1987; ISBN 0-89659-666-4), p. 79. "Harding gravitates to county fairs and to busy sites in San Francisco where lively street life affords many opportunities to record coincidences that, usually, barely impinge on our everyday consciousness."
  67. ^ Stephen Mansfield, "Searching for a sense of 'home' Archived 2017-02-17 at the Wayback Motorcar", Japan Times, 29 March 2009. "[The perambulations of a fictional character of Ian Buruma's] through the ruined city [of Tokyo] evoke the grainy world of photographer Tadahiko Hayashi, whose 1946 'A smoking street waif' shows two half-naked children, unscrubbed only unbowed, sharing a smoke in Ueno." Accessed 17 Feb 2017.
  68. ^ Adams, Tim (9 September 2018). "The big motion picture: a street corner in ceremonious rights-era Chicago". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Archived from the original on 31 December 2018. Retrieved 2019-03-09 . Dave Heath turned moments of solitude into moments of connection and common humanity in his street photography
  69. ^ Woodward, Richard B. (one July 2016). "Dave Heath, Photographer of Isolation, Dies at 85". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 5 March 2019. Retrieved 2019-03-09 . . . . his poetic images of people glimpsed in streets and public parks
  70. ^ O'Hagan, Sean (seven Nov 2012). "Henri Cartier-Bresson: who can beat the chief of monochrome?". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 25 September 2018. Retrieved 2018-09-25 . Much of the work on brandish qualifies as what nosotros now call street photography ... Herzog's street photographs are among the testify's surprises, not just because he was shooting in colour way dorsum in the 1950s, but because of the range of his palette.
  71. ^ Bicker, Phil. "Vancouver Vanguard: Fred Herzog'south Early Color Street Photographs". Fourth dimension. Archived from the original on 2018-09-13. Retrieved 2018-09-25 . Herzog, does not claim to be the first color street photographer—for that award, he cites his contemporary, the more lyrical New York street photographer Saul Leiter—just he was certainly among the first to produce a large volume of color images of this type.
  72. ^ Mee-Lai Stone, "Fan Ho: finding beloved and calorie-free in 1950s Hong Kong – in pictures Archived 2017-03-05 at the Wayback Machine", The Guardian, twenty August 2014. "Nicknamed 'the swell chief', Fan Ho is 1 of Asia'south near beloved street photographers, capturing the spirit of Hong Kong in the 1950s and 60s." Accessed 4 March 2017.
  73. ^ "New York 60s – Sepp Werkmeister Archived 2017-03-12 at the Wayback Car", Münchner Stadtmuseum, 2015. "These photographs identify Sepp Werkmeister inside a long-standing tradition of European and American street photography. Henri Cartier-Bresson, William Klein, Lisette Model, Weegee, Garry Winograd, Thomas Hoepker and Vivian Maier . . . are amongst the all-time-known chroniclers of this genre." Accessed 9 March 2017.
  74. ^ Whet Moser, "RIP Yasuhiro Ishimoto, a cracking photographic chronicler of Chicago and Japan Archived 2017-02-17 at the Wayback Machine", Chicago, eight March 2012. "[Ishimoto] became an proficient street photographer. . . ." Accessed 17 February 2017.
  75. ^ "Shooting the street Archived 2017-02-22 at the Wayback Machine", Blueprint Week, 8 June 2011. "At first [Joseph] was interned on the Isle of Man, before later finding work in newspaper photographic laboratories and photographing street traders on the side." Accessed 21 February 2017.
  76. ^ Daniel Eggleston, "New York cool: The photography of James Jowers Archived 2017-02-17 at the Wayback Auto", TMRW, 28 November 2016. "Information technology's non but the moving pictures that take attempted to capture the feeling of [New York City] through the years, with photographers taking to the streets armed with their camera. One such effigy was James Jowers, who scoured the boroughs of the great city in the 1960s, in search of his muse and in the process snapped the metropolis's inhabitants in the midst of their mundanity." Accessed 17 February 2017.
  77. ^ "Peter Kayafas". The Fine art of Creative Photography . Retrieved xx June 2020.
  78. ^ Mary O'Donnell Hulme, "Artist: Hiroh Kikai Archived 2017-02-18 at the Wayback Machine", International Center of Photography. "Since the mid-1970s, Kikai has carried out a series of street portraits made near the famous [Sensōji] Temple in Tokyo's Asakusa district." Accessed 17 February 2017.
  79. ^ Kaori Shoji, "Photographic portal to a secret, bygone world Archived 2017-02-11 at the Wayback Auto", Nihon Times, 14 October 2015. "Ihei Kimura was one of the showtime photographers to stand on the thronging streets of Ginza in the early 1950s. . . ." Accessed x February 2017.
  80. ^ Sean O'Hagan, "Grainy glory: how Keizo Kitajima tore up the Japanese photobook Archived 2017-03-02 at the Wayback Car", The Guardian, 20 April 2012. "[The content of Photo Express: Tokyo] is wilfully impressionistic street photography that adds upwards to a blurred portrait of nighttime-time Tokyo, likewise as suggesting Kitajima's country of mind at that time." Accessed 2 March 2017.
  81. ^ Patricia Strathern, "Photography: William Klein Archived 2017-02-17 at the Wayback Machine", The Independent, xvi October 1998. "Yet, the apparent chaos, the constant motion of street life [in Klein's New York photographs], is beautifully and rigorously organised, the frame filled with the maximum of unlike deportment and emotions. . . ." Accessed 17 February 2017.
  82. ^ Sean O'Hagan, "40 years on: the exile comes home to Prague Archived 2017-02-xviii at the Wayback Machine", The Observer, 24 August 2008. "During the first week of the Warsaw bloc invasion of Prague, the 30-year-old Koudelka took over 5,000 photographs on the streets of Prague, often under extreme weather condition. He was shot at by a Russian soldier, and pursued through the crowds and into the backstreets around Wenceslas Foursquare." Accessed xviii Feb 2017.
  83. ^ Marker Murrmann, "Mother Jones ' photographers pick the best photobooks of 2013 Archived 2018-06-20 at the Wayback Motorcar", Mother Jones, 19 December 2013. Jeremy Lybarger writes: "Kurata basically ricocheted around Tokyo at night, shooting flash-lit portraits of yakuza gangsters, tattooists, transvestites, strippers, samurai, Hells Angels, guild-goers, motorcar wrecks, and the various nightwalkers in the Shinjuku vice district." Accessed 17 February 2017.
  84. ^ Kōtarō Iizawa, "Innovation in the 1930s: The early on works of Hiroshi Hamaya and Kansuke Yamamoto"; in Judith Keller, Amanda Maddox, eds, Nihon'due south Modern Divide: The Photographs of Hiroshi Hamaya and Kansuke Yamamoto (Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2013; ISBN 9781606061329), p. 13. "Kuwabara, [like Hiroshi Hamaya], directed his camera toward the daily life of ordinary people in the Shitamachi (depression city) areas of Tokyo. . . . Taking snapshots with a small camera such as the Leica was and so a typical 'edgy' hobby for these ii 'Modernistic Boys' of the capital city."
  85. ^ Leah Ollman, "Dorothea Lange: E'er eloquent in her chronicles of American life Archived 2017-02-18 at the Wayback Machine", Los Angeles Times, 10 November 2000. "Lange shot the famous 'White Angel Bread Line' in 1932, on the offset 24-hour interval she photographed on the street – the start day, she afterward recalled, when she went into an area others warned her not to become." Accessed eighteen February 2017.
  86. ^ Simon Usborne, "Sergio Larrain was on the cusp of photographic greatness but gave it all up for a spiritual life Archived 2017-05-20 at the Wayback Machine", The Contained, eleven March 2016. "Larrain is best known for his street photography, and apply of shadow and angles in a way few had tried before." Accessed 12 February 2017.
  87. ^ Douglas Martin, "Arthur Leipzig, photographer of everyday life in New York, dies at 96 Archived 2017-02-12 at the Wayback Automobile The New York Times, 5 December 2014. Leipzig is described as "a documentary photographer known for his well-baked, detailed, emotionally provocative images, particularly those of children at play on the streets and piers of mid-20th-century New York City".
  88. ^ Margalit Play a trick on, "Saul Leiter, photographer who captured New York's palette, dies at 89 Archived 2017-02-13 at the Wayback Machine", The New York Times, 27 November 2013. "Of the tens of thousands of images he shot — many now esteemed every bit among the finest examples of street photography in the world — most remain unprinted." Accessed 10 February 2017.
  89. ^ "Celebrating women's history: Rebecca Lepkoff Archived 2017-03-08 at the Wayback Machine", From the Stacks, New York Historical Society Museum & Library, 25 March 2015. "To gloat Women's History Month, here are some images by pioneering street photographer Rebecca Lepkoff." Accessed 8 March 2017.
  90. ^ "Photography from the Ramer Drove comes to Crocker Archived 2017-03-02 at the Wayback Automobile", Village Life, 28 May 2016. "New York street photographer Leon Levinstein saw his camera as his tool for unmasking appearances." Accessed 2 March 2017.
  91. ^ Marcus Williamson, "Helen Levitt: Photographer renowned for her portraits of street life in New York Archived 2017-04-11 at the Wayback Machine", The Independent, 17 Apr 2009.
  92. ^ "Feng Li's feted beginning volume White Night". British Journal of Photography. 7 November 2017. Archived from the original on 7 February 2019. Retrieved 2019-02-06 . in his free time he's a flâneur, shooting on the street with free reign to react to what he sees and tape it as he feels
  93. ^ "Feng Li "combs the streets" of Singapore in his latest obscure serial". Information technology's Prissy That. 31 January 2019. Archived from the original on 7 Feb 2019. Retrieved 2019-02-06 . Chinese lensman Feng Li is known for his hawk-eyed street photography.
  94. ^ Alex Vadukul, "Two visual tales of New York Archived 2015-05-02 at the Wayback Auto", New York Times, 17 April 2015. "Mr. Liebling was renowned for capturing the city'due south poetic and fleeting moments with a social-minded sensibility." Accessed 2 March 2017.
  95. ^ Tom Seymour, "David Lurie'southward exploration of Cape Town'southward streets comes to London Archived 2017-02-19 at the Wayback Car", British Journal of Photography, 2 November 2016. Accessed 19 Feb 2017.
  96. ^ "Piece of work of World Renowned Street Photographer Finds Dwelling at State Historical Society of Missouri, Fine art Currently on Exhibition". Country Historical Society of Missouri. Archived from the original on ane April 2019. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
  97. ^ Kaori Shoji, "Photographic portal to a secret, bygone world Archived 2017-02-11 at the Wayback Motorcar", Japan Times, 14 October 2015. "[Vivian Maier] took thousands of powerful street photographs and never let the world know about them." Accessed 10 February 2017.
  98. ^ Sean O'Hagan, "Mary Ellen Mark obituary Archived 2017-02-18 at the Wayback Machine", The Guardian, 27 May 2015. "Mark came of age as a photographer in the mid-to-late 1960s, oft shooting on the streets of her native Philadelphia. . . . She spoke afterwards of the joy she found the beginning time she went out on the streets with a camera: 'I just took a walk and started making contact with people and photographing them, and I thought: "I love this. This is what I desire to do for ever." ' "
  99. ^ Karen Rosenberg, "Glimpses of urban landscapes by: 'London Street Photography' at Museum of the Urban center of New York Archived 2016-12-23 at the Wayback Automobile", New York Times, 26 July 2012. "[I]t's hard to fault the curators . . . for including seven photographs from the 1950s by Roger Mayne, a range that shows him growing more confident in his shots of gangs and gamblers. They're stylish images also. . . ." Accessed 9 February 2017.
  100. ^ "The big motion-picture show: sandcastles on America's final borderland". The Observer. 9 May 2021. Retrieved 2021-07-09 . He made his name every bit a street photographer in New York, characteristically up close and personal with faces in a crowd.
  101. ^ McCann, Matt (25 March 2013). "Wading Into Weirdness on the Street". The New York Times . Retrieved 2020-08-21 . He's the guy with a camera, a wry sensibility and a measure of both luck and patience; a San Francisco-based street photographer of Scottish extraction whose work feels similar a field guide to how normal things can exist really odd, contradictory — and visually rich.
  102. ^ Horacio Fernández, "Miserachs Barcelona: Xavier Miserachs Archived 2016-ten-24 at the Wayback Machine", Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art (MACBA), 2015. "From 1961, Miserachs worked professionally in advertising, photojournalism and, above all, street photography, 'the pleasure of wandering effectually trying to correspond what to me seemed distinctive and significant about the identify'." Accessed 10 February 2017.
  103. ^ "Lisette Model Archived 2016-11-eleven at the Wayback Machine", J. Paul Getty Museum. "Model's images can exist categorized every bit 'street photography', a style which developed later the invention of the mitt-held camera, which fabricated quick, candid shots possible." Accessed eighteen February 2017.
  104. ^ Jake Cigaineiro, "Daido Moriyama gives a fresh look to Tokyo Archived 2017-12-xv at the Wayback Car", New York Times, 14 March 2016. "Having wandered the buzzing Tokyo district of Shinjuku for more 40 years capturing urban scenes in his signature off-kilter, grainy black-and-white images, the Japanese street photographer Daido Moriyama, 77, said he needed to 'reset'." Accessed 19 February 2017.
  105. ^ Caille Milner, "Nagano Shigeichi: 'Nagano's Tokyo' (2014) Archived 2016-06-18 at the Wayback Motorcar", ASX, 19 May 2014. "The subject field affair, likewise, is so typical of street photography that it verges on platitude. (Here we have the architecture of parking lots, there the overhead tangle of electrical wires, oh, and here's the repose desperation on the faces of jostled people passing by)." Accessed 10 February 2017.
  106. ^ "Gritty street photos of Tokyo in the 70s and 80s Archived 2017-02-nineteen at the Wayback Machine", Vice, 23 October 2016. "[Naitō's] documentation of Japanese street scenes from 1970 through 1985 reveal another subculture, of sorts, in Japan." Accessed 19 February 2017.
  107. ^ a b c Sean O'Hagan, "Why don't we practice it in the road? Archived 2017-03-02 at the Wayback Automobile", The Observer, 25 May 2008. "Room 1 [of the Tate Modern exhibition Street & Studio: An Urban History of Photography], entitled 'Precursors', is worth lingering in. Information technology offers a glimpse of the work of the earliest pioneers of street photography, including Charles Nègre, Henri Rivière and Alfred Stieglitz. . . ." Accessed 2 March 2017.
  108. ^ "London Street Photography", Museum of London, 2011, archived past the Wayback Machine on 22 March 2011. "[Nicholls's] candid photographs of well-to-do Edwardians at leisure are particularly revealing".
  109. ^ O'Hagan, Sean (26 August 2016). "Colin O'Brien obituary". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 20 February 2017. Retrieved 20 February 2017. He funded his street photography with various office jobs and by working as a technician. . . .
  110. ^ 2012 archive Archived 2016-12-30 at the Wayback Machine, Haus am Kleistpark. "Hildegard Ochse (1935 – 1997) ist eine Berliner Stadt- und Staßenfotografin. . . ." Accessed xviii February 2017.
  111. ^ Anne Wilkes Tucker, "The hereafter of Tokyo". In New York Is (Tokyo: Akio Nagasawa Publishing, 2012; OCLC 813312639). While in New York, "[Ogawa] photographed . . . sunny days on Coney Island beaches, bulldoze-in theaters, caricatural shows, and 42nd Street arcades. He rode the subway, walked the length of Manhattan, and traveled through each of the other four boroughs in New York Metropolis" (p. 157).
  112. ^ 河野知佳, 大西みつぐ写真展「Wonder Land 1980-1989」, デジカメ Watch, 22 Feb 2016. 「大西みつぐ氏はスナップ写真を得意とし、生まれ育った東京の下町や湾岸を拠点に撮影を続けている写真家です。」 Accessed 19 February 2017.
  113. ^ Geoff Dyer, "A moment of joy, a show of supremacy Archived 2017-02-18 at the Wayback Machine", The Observer, 17 April 2005. "Few [photographs] . . . are every bit saturated with history equally Ruth Orkin's picture of the crowd in Times Foursquare on VE Day, viii May 1945."
  114. ^ Martin Golding, "Graham Ovenden'south street children"; in Graham Ovenden, Babyhood Streets (New York: Ophelia, 1998; ISBN 1-888425-ten-five). "He mostly slept crude, on factory gratings or wherever there was warmth, and spent the days walking the streets with his camera at the ready" (p. 7).
  115. ^ Richard Lacayo, "Homer Page: Lost and found Archived 2017-03-02 at the Wayback Motorcar", Time, xiii March 2009. "The 'subject field' [of Page'due south Guggenheim-financed work of 1949–l] is very often merely the dreamy inwardness of people walking or standing on the streets of a bully urban center." Accessed 2 March 2017.
  116. ^ Mark Patterson, "Fine art: Charlie Phillips – the urban eye Archived 2014-01-07 at the Wayback Machine", Nottingham Post, 25 Apr 2013. "[T]he immature Jamaican set out to record the people and street life of his office of England: westward London and Notting Hill in the mid to late 1960s and early 70s".
  117. ^ Biondi, Elisabeth (12 May 2010). "On and Off the Walls: Gus Powell'southward Honest Pictures". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on 21 March 2015. Retrieved 23 May 2017.
  118. ^ Sean O'Hagan, "American Colour 1962–1965 by Tony Ray-Jones: Review Archived 2017-02-nineteen at the Wayback Machine", The Observer, 5 October 2013. "Ray-Jones'southward [New York, colour] street photographs are not as kinetic or wilfully skewed compositionally as the work of his American contemporaries Meyorowitz or Gary Winogrand. Instead, he ofttimes lets his outsider'south center balance on people relaxing, conversing, reading or but waiting among the city'due south frenetic pulse." Accessed 19 February 2017.
  119. ^ Tom Seymour, "Remembering Marc Riboud, who has died at age 93 Archived 2017-02-14 at the Wayback Automobile, British Journal of Photography, 1 September 2016. "Riboud published over xxx books throughout his career. They included series covering the Cultural Revolution in Prc, Tibet, Nihon, equally well as archetype street scenes of life in Paris." Accessed fourteen February 2017.
  120. ^ William Grimes, "Willy Ronis, lensman of Paris's warmer side, is expressionless at 99 Archived 2017-02-08 at the Wayback Car", New York Times, 17 September 2009. "Mr. Ronis, like his colleagues Robert Doisneau, Henri Cartier-Bresson and Brassaï, wandered the streets of Paris, open up to serendipity, which usually found him." Accessed 19 February 2017.
  121. ^ Coomes, Phil (21 September 2011). "When human being meets beast at a country show". BBC News. Archived from the original on 27 February 2017. Retrieved xx February 2017. More than recently, country shows take been the hunting basis of street photographer Paul Russell whose eye for a humorous moment is as keen as any you will detect.
  122. ^ Maya Vocalist, "What nosotros talk about when we talk well-nigh street style Archived 2017-03-03 at the Wayback Machine", Faddy, 11 April 2016. "When Edward Linley Sambourne, an illustrator for the magazine Punch, started shooting passersby near his London home in 1906, he wasn't out to document the current fashions." Accessed ii March 2017.
  123. ^ Mufson, Beckett (iii January 2017). "The iv Elements of a Great Candid Photograph". Vice. Archived from the original on 29 January 2019. Retrieved 2019-02-11 . Semetko specializes in candid street photography, capturing on-the-fly observations in a series called Unposed. . . .
  124. ^ Nicolas Rapold, "Jamel Shabazz Street Lensman, a New York portrait: Rappers of old, through a lens of history Archived 2017-02-twenty at the Wayback Motorcar", New York Times, 1 August 2013. "Mr. Shabazz, affable nonetheless intent, is shown taking fresh shots of loftier school students as well as veterans and dancers in street parades that neatly symbolize the pageant of life." Accessed 19 February 2017.
  125. ^ Kevin Nance, "'Richard Nickel: Dangerous Years' and 'Gotta Go Gotta Period' capture Chicago's past Archived 2017-02-22 at the Wayback Machine", Chicago Tribune, 17 December 2015. "Siskind was [in the 1950s] a stick-to-the-facts street photographer, although he later expanded his horizons considerably." Accessed 21 February 2017.
  126. ^ Hannah Waldram, "Third Floor Gallery: A year in pictures Archived 2017-02-12 at the Wayback Motorcar", The Guardian, 11 February 2011. Solomons is described by Maciej Dakowicz as a "leading British street photographer". Accessed 12 Feb 2017.
  127. ^ Karen Rosenberg, "Glimpses of urban landscapes by: 'London Street Photography' at Museum of the Metropolis of New York Archived 2016-12-23 at the Wayback Auto", New York Times, 26 July 2012. Singled out is "Terry Spencer's 1969 shot of skinheads and hippies, the two groups passing inside a stone's throw of each other in Piccadilly Circus". Accessed ix February 2017.
  128. ^ Dawn Freer, "Fred Stein (1909–1967): A retrospective". pp. 510–519 of Eckart Goebel, Sigrid Weigel, eds, "Escape to Life": High german Intellectuals in New York: A Compendium on Exile later on 1933 (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2012; ISBN 9783110258684). "[S]treet photography was one of the principal areas [of photography] in which [spontaneity] was used. This time of new discovery was a aureate age for photography in Paris. / Fred Stein had the enormous skilful fortune to exist in the right place at the right fourth dimension" (p. 513).
  129. ^ William Grimes, "Louis Stettner, who photographed the everyday New York and Paris, dies at 93 Archived 2017-01-04 at the Wayback Machine", New York Times, fourteen Oct 2016. "Louis Stettner, a photographer who explored the streets of the ii cities he called his 'spiritual mothers,' New York and Paris, recording the daily lives of ordinary people. . . ." Accessed 9 Feb 2017.
  130. ^ David Bernstein, "An invisible street photographer gets his shut-up Archived 2015-12-29 at the Wayback Machine", New York Times, xix May 2005. "Mr. Stochl'due south admirers have compared him to street-photography masters of by eras like Henri Cartier-Bresson, Garry Winogrand and Robert Frank." Accessed 21 February 2017.
  131. ^ Marker Feeney, "Paul Strand making photography mod Archived 2017-03-02 at the Wayback Machine", Boston World, 22 Nov 2014. "In their unflinching candor, his serial of surreptitiously taken street portraits [of 1916] look back to Frans Hals and ahead to Diane Arbus." Accessed ii March 2017.
  132. ^ "Christer Strömholm, 1918–2002 Archived 2017-02-22 at the Wayback Automobile". Moderna Museet, [2005]. "Later, when [Strömholm] lived in Paris intermittently in the 1950s and '60s, he developed a street-photography style, and it was during this period that he took his familiar portraits of transsexuals in Place Blanche." Accessed 22 February 2017.
  133. ^ Ferdinand Brueggemann, "Issei Suda, a Master of Japanese Photography: Interview Roland Malaise with Ferdinand Brueggemann: Role 2 Archived 2017-02-22 at the Wayback Motorcar", Japan-photo.info, 6 July 2016. "[Suda] photographs everyday scenes – only not necessarily scenes from the vibrant centre of the metropolis of Tôkyô, he instead shows side streets and areas that seem more similar small towns. . . . [K]any of his photographs in Human Memory depict a sense of isolation. . . . The focus is more than on the scenes in which people appear as isolated individuals in an urban context." Accessed 22 February 2017.
  134. ^ "London Street Photography", Museum of London, 2011, archived by the Wayback Machine on 22 March 2011. This cites Suschitzky'southward "personal project to photograph the life of Charing Cross Road, both solar day and night".
  135. ^ Angela Ashman, "Q&A: Michael Ernest Sweet discusses The Human Fragment and what he hates virtually digital photography Archived 2016-05-xv at the Wayback Machine", Hamlet Vocalization, 12 December 2013. "With his minor Ricoh GR in ane mitt, [Sweet] scans the streets for a target, snaps his photograph without using the viewfinder, and moves on in the blink of an heart." Accessed 22 Feb 2017.
  136. ^ "Homer Sykes: 40 years documenting Great britain Archived 2017-02-23 at the Wayback Auto", The Photographers Gallery, 2013. "Photographer Homer Sykes gives a talk about his experiences producing documentary work, street photography, and book and magazine projects during his remarkable 40-twelvemonth career." Accessed 23 February 2017.
  137. ^ Shoair Mavlian, "Yutaka Takanashi: Tokyo-jin: 1974, printed 2012 Archived 2017-02-13 at the Wayback Machine", Tate, August 2012. "[Takanashi's photobook] Tokyo-jin . .  is more in the mode of urban documentary or street photography, showing people going almost their daily lives, shopping, eating, working and relaxing." Accessed 12 February 2017.
  138. ^ 生命あふれる、人々の営み―日本人の心がここにある 田沼 武能 作品展「1950年代・日本人の暮らし」 JCII [Wikidata], 1992. 当時20代の田沼氏は、そうした時代の人々の暮らしを「若さ故の馬力」ともいえる勢いと、瑞々しい視点で丹念に捉えています。/ そこに展開するのは、復興しつつある街並みを往来する人々、エネルギッシュな祭り、下町の路地、街頭テレビを見るために集まった大勢の群衆。 Accessed 23 February 2017.
  139. ^ Alex Linder, "Photography Friday: Sam Tata Archived 2017-11-05 at the Wayback Machine", Shanghaiist, 3 June 2016. "Learning from masters such as Oscar Seepol, Lang Jingshan and Liu Shuchong, Tata purchased a small-scale format camera and captured street scenes and everyday life. . . ." Accessed 23 February 2017.
  140. ^ Sabine Grunwald, "Elsa Thiemann im Bauhaus Archiv Museum für Gestaltung Archived 2016-12-twenty at the Wayback Car", Aviva-Berlin, 29 March 2004. "Ihre bevorzugten Großstadt-Motive sind die des Alltags, des 'Berliner Miljös': Straßenszenen, spielende Kinder, Berliner Hinterhöfe, wobei sie nicht nur dokumentiert, sondern ganz gezielt mit Licht und Schatten moduliert." Accessed 24 February 2017.
  141. ^ Karen Rosenberg, "Glimpses of urban landscapes past: 'London Street Photography' at Museum of the Urban center of New York Archived 2016-12-23 at the Wayback Machine", New York Times, 26 July 2012. "Thomson produced a photographic survey of London's poor (published in 1877 as 'Street Life in London')." Accessed 9 Feb 2017.
  142. ^ 三浦雅弘 常盤とよ子の視線 Archived 2018-01-01 at the Wayback Machine 『応用社会学研究』 (Rikkyo University), no. 56 (2014), p. 63 (PDF). 『危険な毒花』に収められた写真作品は、1954年から56年にかけて横浜市内の娼婦街で撮影された売春婦たちのなまなましい生態の記録である。 Accessed 24 February 2017.
  143. ^ Ken Kwok, "Peter Turnley's Paris street photos make their way to Leica Gallery Archived 2016-05-02 at the Wayback Automobile", Los Angeles Times, 22 May 2014. "Compiled from 40 years of taking to the streets with his camera, Turnley'southward photographs offer a poignant and rather intimate view of its inhabitants engaged in private even so very public displays of affection." Accessed 25 Feb 2017.
  144. ^ Coomes, Phil (16 December 2009). "Street photographers do it in public". BBC News. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 22 February 2017. The great thing about street photography is that all you have to practice is step out of your front door with camera in manus and you are up and running. . . . 1 of the best is Nick Turpin. . . .
  145. ^ Joep Eijkens, "Uit het rijke leven en werk van Stephan Vanfleteren", PhotoNmagazine.eu, 26 Nov 2019. Accessed xv Baronial 2021. "In 1993, in afwachting van zijn militaire dienst, maakt Vanfleteren een trip naar New York. Met werk dat hij daar maakte – voornamelijk straatfotografie – wist hij het weekendmagazine van De Standaard te halen."
  146. ^ "The streets of New York: American photographs from the collection, 1938–1958" (PDF), National Gallery of Fine art. "Vestal'south photographs of sidewalks, cafeterias, and street festivals depict the moody and atmospheric beauty of the metropolis." Accessed 26 Feb 2017.
  147. ^ "A vanished globe: Roman Vishniac'southward street photography of Jewish life from the 1920s to 1950s – in pictures Archived 2017-03-02 at the Wayback Automobile", The Guardian, 17 September 2014.
  148. ^ Jade Severs, "Street photography using flash: how Dougie Wallace photographs Indian taxis using flash Archived 2017-02-25 at the Wayback Auto", Amateur Photographer, 19 May 2016. "Glaswegian photographer Dougie Wallace has gained a reputation as one of the U.k.'due south leading street photographers." Accessed 25 February 2017.
  149. ^ "Gritty photographer Weegee captures New York's sordid and offense-ridden streets later dark Archived 2017-02-27 at the Wayback Machine", New York Daily News. "Gritty lensman [Weegee] made a name for himself by documenting the harsh reality of criminal offense, injury and death while covering New York City from the 1930s into the 1950s." Accessed 26 February 2017.
  150. ^ "Exhibition: William Whiffin'south East End - Photographs, 1910s–1950s Archived 2015-12-22 at the Wayback Motorcar", Belfry Hamlets Council, 2015. "One of the primeval and well-nigh pre-eminent artists working in what today might be known as street photography, Whiffin captured daily life in the East Stop [of London]."
  151. ^ 第20回林忠彦賞受賞記念写真展 山内道雄『基隆』 Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine, Fujifilm Square, 2011. 作者の山内道雄さんはストリート・スナップの撮り手として活動する写真家です。 Accessed 26 February 2017.
  152. ^ Yuri Mitsuda, "Nakaji Yasui: Ultimate reality: A giant of the aureate historic period of photography." In Nakaji Yasui 1903–1942: The Photography = 『成誕百年 安井仲治 写真のすべて』 (Tokyo: Shoto Museum of Fine art, 2004). In Yasui'southward historic photographs of a May Day rally in 1931, "He worked from a distance and shut up, pursuing images of the demonstrators' faces and the motility of the demonstration, nailing its energy and speed perfectly" (p. 316).
  153. ^ Tim Wong, "Yau Leung was the Chinese Cartier-Bresson. Why isn't he better known?", Daily Telegraph, one January 2014, as archived by the Wayback Motorcar on 7 Jan 2014.
  154. ^ Thornton, Cistron (4 April 1976). "Photography View". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-08-12 . Working in the parks, on the streets and at the beaches, he catches his subjects ofttimes unawares and commonly ignored by everyone else around them. ... Wolff's pictures are typical of the kind of street photography that a whole generation of young photographers has taken to with a passion and carelessness that are not encouraging. These photographers are descendents, via Robert Frank, of such yard progenitors as Kertesz and Cartier‐Bresson.
  155. ^ "Max Yavno Archived 2017-03-03 at the Wayback Car", Eye for Artistic Photography. "His humanistic sensibility is revealed in his work, which includes street photographs made in New York, San Francisco, and Los Angeles." Accessed three March 2017.
  156. ^ Jackie Higgins, "Street and Society", pp. 148–151 of Juliet Hacking, ed., Photography: The Whole Story (New York: Prestel, 2012; ISBN 978-3-7913-4734-9). "[Zille] roamed the streets of Berlin, rarely venturing beyond his local neighborhood of Charlottenburg, snapping images that exude spontaneity."

External links [edit]

  • Media related to Street photographers at Wikimedia Commons

DOWNLOAD HERE

Posted by: samuelthemput.blogspot.com

0 Komentar

Post a Comment




banner