Description of Museum Quality Wall Art Ideas: Dives and Lazarus, 1680 By Luca Giordano Description Inter-changeable wall-art? Finally! FORGET LONG-TERM commitments to one image! The sleek, low-profile frame stays on your wall and the fabric image can be removed & switched whenever you like - seasons, trends, moods, holidays, events. It only takes a few seconds and no are tools required. The premium quality fabric image is designed to be inserted into the frame for quick living room or bedroom wall refreshes! Fold and store your fabrics in a drawer until you want to display them again. *All orders are CUSTOM PRINTED especially for YOU!
New-York City, 1950 : des moments contemplatifs du tumulte new-yorkais, quelques images chaleureuses et parfois intimes. Des peintures, ou des clichés
* “Master Profiles” is a series profiling all the great photographers of uncontrolled life. Unlike the rest of the blog, I’m doing these in a straight profile format to make it easy for quick access to facts, quotes and knowledge on all the masters. I’ll also group them together here every time I add a new one. Profile: Lars Tunbjörk (1956-2015) […]
Born in Brooklyn, New York, to working-class Jewish parents of Eastern European descent, Leonard Freed first wanted to become a painter. However, he began taking photographs while in the Netherlands in 1953, and discovered that this was where his passion lay. In 1954, after trips through Europe and North Africa, he returned to the United States and studied in Alexei Brodovitch's 'design laboratory'. He moved to Amsterdam in 1958 and photographed the Jewish community there. He pursued this concern in numerous books and films, examining German society and his own Jewish roots; his book on the Jews in Germany was published in 1961, and Made in Germany, about post-war Germany, appeared in 1965. Working as a freelance photographer from 1961 onwards, Freed began to travel widely, photographing blacks in America (1964-65), events in Israel (1967-68), the Yom Kippur War in 1973, and the New York City police department (1972-79). He also shot four films for Japanese, Dutch and Belgian television. Early in Freed's career, Edward Steichen, then Director of Photography at the Museum of Modern Art, bought three of his photographs for the museum. Steichen told Freed that he was one of the three best young photographers he had seen and urged him to remain an amateur, as the other two were now doing commercial photography and their work had become uninteresting. 'Preferably,' he advised, 'be a truck driver.' Freed joined Magnum in 1972. His coverage of the American civil rights movement first made him famous, but he also produced major essays on Poland, Asian immigration in England, North Sea oil development, and Spain after Franco. Photography became Freed's means of exploring societal violence and racial discrimination. Leonard Freed died in Garrison, New York, on 30 November 2006. (via Magnum Photos) Martin Luther King, Jr Romanian Revolution 1989 "Ultimately photography is about who you are. It's the seeking of truth in relation to yourself. And seeking truth becomes a habit." Leonard Freed
Photographer Oliver Klink's series "Consequences" captures traditions of remote cultures. Read our exclusive interview about the incredible travel photos.
photographic and mixed media works from my HUMAN BLUR SERIES // MYANMAR BLUR IV. This mixed media collection is a series based on photographs
Oil on canvas 57"x45" (146x114 cm) February 2009
"Until the Day Dims" by Maria Kaimaki
Biography (1932-Present)Duane Michals was born in 1932 in Mckeesport, Pennsylvania into a typical working-class environment: his father was a steel worker and his mother a housekeeper. His interest…
Enfin le #WeekEnd, je vous souhaite un repos bien mérité et une belle nuit à venir sur cette somptueuse #photo de Daniel Kordan. À demain.
The 1930s saw the emergence of riveting night photography, from iconic lensmen like Ilse Bing and Brassaï. Some marquee examples—along with Jonathan Becker’s recollection of Brassaï, his mentor.
The Women Photograph 2018 Year in Pictures features 100 of our favorite images shot by our members this past year, encompassing editorial assignment work and excerpts from personal projects, taking us from Nigeria to Yemen to the Philippines to Brazil. Make sure to check out each photographer’s work
Amrita Sher-Gil
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Underwater photography by Toni Frissell, published in Harper's Bazaar in December 1947. Toni Frissell was an American photographer who was active from the 1930s to the 1970s. She was known for her work in fashion photography, as well as for her portraits and photojournalism. Frissell was one of the first female photographers to work for Vogue magazine, and her images appeared in a number of other high-profile publications, including Harper's Bazaar, Life, and Sports Illustrated. Her style was characterized by its elegant composition, innovative use of light, and an attention to detail that made her work both visually striking and timeless. Throughout her career, Frissell documented a wide range of subjects, from the lives of soldiers during World War II to the fashion and society of the mid-20th century. Her innovative and experimental approach to photography, and her underwater images were no exception. Frissell's photographs of women underwater were often striking and imaginative, capturing the fluidity and grace of the female form in a new and unique way. These images were a departure from the traditional fashion and portrait photography that she was known for, and they demonstrate her ability to push the boundaries of her medium and create truly original and imaginative works of art. To this day, Frissell's underwater photographs remain some of her most memorable and visually compelling images.
New York-based photographer Ben Zank creates intriguing portraits rich with surreal elements. The Bronx native's portfolio boasts countless images, each