A selection of six artists demonstrates that Minimalism can also be presented as art in movement, or kinetically, in the contribution of Gavin Turk;
as photojournalism of an island destroyed after the recent war in the Balkans; as Surrealism with basic colouring.
Currently based in Paris, France, Sonia Szóstak is talented photographer specializing in the diverse fields of fashion and beauty portraits as well
as photojournalism.
In each case her idiosyncratic style traverses and ultimately defies categorisations such
as photojournalism and visual art.
Not exact matches
PHOTO BY JAMES HAMILTON
As staff photographer for The Village Voice, Hamilton has taken the pictures of many directors — from Hitchcock and Truffaut to Woody Allen and John Carpenter — and turned
photojournalism into high - contrast art.
In Community Photojournalists, students investigate community - based or cultural stories that are eventually packaged
as photo essays and audio recordings that adhere to professional
photojournalism and publication guidelines.
Major topics include the worldwide production and dissemination of photographic images; the local and global character of specific genres, such
as portraiture and
photojournalism; the photographic representation of human movement and migration; and (post) colonial photographies.
Opening: «A Cool Breeze» at Howard Greenberg Gallery Founded in 1981, Howard Greenberg Gallery calls itself the first to display
photojournalism and «street photography,» before these genres were widely recognized
as fine art.
Russian Photography after the Revolution will feature rare, large - format gelatin silver prints by Boris Ignatovich (1899 - 1976), a master of the Soviet avant - garde; Arkady Shaikhet (1898 - 1959), widely considered to be the founder of Soviet
photojournalism; and Aleksandr Rodchenko (1891 - 1956), perhaps the most acclaimed figure in early twentieth - century Russian art and design;
as well
as Abram Shterenberg (1900 - 1979), Georgy Petrussov (1903 - 1971), Semyon Fridlyand (1905 - 1964), Sergey Shimansky (1898 - 1972), Solomon Telingater (1903 - 1969), Emmanuil Evzerikhin (1911 - 1984), Yakov Khalip (1908 - 1980), and Georgy Zelma (1906 - 1984).
Like punk, Burgin's work is similarly patchwork in its sources and in its aggressive relationship to history, but by contrast it appears virtually seamless
as an image; the work's frisson comes from how closely it approaches advertising's codes, its asymptotic proximity to
photojournalism, without touching either one precisely.
Works on view are varied, including pioneering x-rays and aerial views, artifacts of early
photojournalism, and recent examples of conceptual art all grouped in arrangements to emphasize the range of possibilities offered by photography
as a medium.
Over the course of his thirty - year career, Williams (b. 1956) has crafted photographs that engage — often through uncanny mimicry — the conventions of
photojournalism, picture archives, and commercial imagery,
as well
as their sociopolitical contexts and implications.
Drawn from a collection of
photojournalism and documentary photography, many of the images have appeared in the press — but here they are presented
as works of art in their right.
Those images combine the commercial and classical
as icons of art history are juxtaposed with contemporary painting, commercial illustration,
photojournalism, and three - dimensional household items.
She has written for a wide variety of publications, including Artforum, Aperture, and The New York Times and has contributed essays to a number of books and catalogs on subjects such
as crime photography, art, fashion photography, pornography, and
photojournalism.
Taking sources and techniques from historical archives, televised news,
photojournalism, or sports and advertising culture
as their starting point, each artist in Mass Mediations manipulates mass media to explore how prevailing ideologies are embedded these outlets.
After the newspaper folded in 1946, Leipzig worked for a brief stint at International News Photos before beginning a successful career in freelance
photojournalism, traveling on assignments around the world and contributing to such periodicals
as The Sunday New York Times, This Week, Fortune, Look, LIFE, and Parade.
Among the great masters of European photography, Chim and Vishniac are famed for
photojournalism and social documentary depicting tumultuous events of the 20th century,
as well portraits of some of the most important celebrities of the time.
As a previous student of
photojournalism and sociology at San Francisco State University, and documentary photography at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, Joyce is able to methodically catalogue the aspects of the game while maintaining their inherent leisure, levity and warmth.
He received his B.F.A. in
photojournalism from Ohio University and went directly to work for Look magazine
as a staff photographer and traveled extensively in South East Asia, Mexico, India, Europe and Russia.
For its 36th edition, 86 photography galleries will present work that includes contemporary, modern, documentation and
photojournalism, 19th century photographs
as well
as photo - based art, video and new media.
Howard Greenberg Gallery — founded in 1981 and originally known
as Photofind — was the first to consistently exhibit
photojournalism and «street» photography, now accepted
as important components of photographic art.
She studied journalism and
photojournalism at ISIC Institut Supérieur de l'Information et de la Communication in Rabat, Morocco, before focusing on photography
as a means of best materialising her combined interests of literature and poetry into visual form.
While he broke race barriers to shoot fashion for Vogue and portraits of stars such
as Ingrid Bergman and Louis Armstrong, Parks is perhaps best known for his
photojournalism, which included illustrated stories of Harlem gangs and Brazilian slums.
The photographers, representing a range of practices from
photojournalism to creative photography, included Arnold Newman and Gordon Parks (see Lot 102),
as well
as Wynn Bullock, Eliot Elisofon, Ernst Haas, Philippe Halsman, Ken Heyman, Marc Riboud, Aaron Siskind, and Howard Sochurek.