We received a diverse collection of quality artwork from
photographers around the world including the US, Germany, United Kingdom, France, Australia and the Philippines.
Not exact matches
His shots
around the
world have earned him many travel photography awards
including «Travel
Photographer of the Year» by the North American Travel Journalists Association (NATJA) in 2013 and 2015, and by the Society of American Travel Writers (SATW) in 2014.
A series of talks over the four days saw
photographers from
around the
world,
including Nick Knight, Mary McCartney, Don McCullin, Alec Soth, Martin Parr, Edward Burtynsky and Hannah Starkey in conversation with a host of creative practitioners such as David Campany, Edmund de Waal and Hans - Ulrich Obrist.
Counting down the days until Paris Fashion Week starts; it is arguably the biggest week for all fashionistas
includes fashion editors, buyers, bloggers and
photographers from all
around the
world...
[4] He has also curated numerous exhibitions in many other distinguished museums
around the
world,
including Events of the Self: Portraiture and Social Identity, The Walther Collection, Germany; Archive Fever: Uses of the Document in Contemporary Art, International Center of Photography; The Short Century: Independence and Liberation Movements in Africa, 1945 — 1994, [14] Villa Stuck, Munich, Martin - Gropius - Bau, Berlin, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, and P.S. 1 and Museum of Modern Art, New York; Century City, Tate Modern, London; Mirror's Edge, Bildmuseet, Umeå, Sweden, Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver, Tramway, Glasgow, Castello di Rivoli, Torino; In / Sight: African
Photographers, 1940 — Present, [15] Guggenheim Museum; Global Conceptualism, Queens Museum, New York, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Henry Art Gallery, Seattle, List Gallery at MIT, Cambridge; David Goldblatt: Fifty One Years, Museum of Contemporary Art, Barcelona, AXA Gallery, New York, Palais des Beaux Art, Brussels, Lenbachhaus, Munich, Johannesburg Art Gallery, Johannesburg, Witte de With, Rotterdam.
He has curated numerous exhibitions in some of the most distinguished museums
around the
world,
including Archive Fever: Uses of the Document in Contemporary Art, International Center of Photography; The Short Century: Independence and Liberation Movements in Africa, 1945 — 1994, Museum Villa Stuck, Munich, Gropius Bau, Berlin, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, and P.S. 1 and Museum of Modern Art, New York; Century City, Tate Modern, London; Mirror's Edge, Bildmuseet, Umeå, Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver, Tramway, Glasgow, Castello di Rivoli, Torino; In / Sight: African
Photographers, 1940 — Present, Guggenheim Museum; Global Conceptualism, Queens Museum, New York, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Henry Art Gallery, Seattle, List Gallery at MIT, Cambridge; David Goldblatt: Fifty One Years, Museum of Contemporary Art, Barcelona, AXA Gallery, New York, Palais des Beaux Art, Brussels, Lenbach Haus, Munich, Johannesburg Art Gallery, Johannesburg, Witte de With, Rotterdam; Co-Curator of Echigo - Tsumari Sculpture Biennale in Japan; co-curator of Cinco Continente: Biennale of Painting, Mexico City; Stan Douglas: Le Detroit, Art Institute of Chicago.
Today, fine art photographs can be seen in many museums
around the
world,
including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC, (Stieglitz, Steichen, Walker Evans, and Ford Motor Company collections); Museum of Modern Art (MOMA), NYC (collections assembled by Edward Steichen, John Szarkowski and Peter Galassi); Guggenheim Museum New York, (Robert Mapplethorpe Collection); Art Institute of Chicago (Alfred Stieglitz Collection); Detroit Institute of Arts (Albert / Peggy de Salle Gallery); Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Wallis Annenberg Photography Dept); Philadelphia Museum of Art (30,000 photos by
photographers like Alfred Stieglitz, Paul Strand); and Victoria & Albert Museum, London (500,000 images from 1839 - present).
The gallery invites all 2D and 3D artists (
including photographers) from
around the
world to make online submissions for possible inclusion in the Gallery's October 2015 online -LSB-...]
Intrinsically linked to the milieu of postwar American art, Edith Schloss was an integral member of the Chelsea - New York art
world, which flourished
around the New York School and
included photographer and filmmaker Rudy Burckhardt (whom she married in 1947) and the Jane Street Group
around Nell Blaine.
Represented in the photography collections of many major museums
around the
world,
including the Metropolitan Museum of Art and The Museum of Modern Art, New York, this is a rare opportunity to gain access to the
photographer's vast archive while also having the potential to walk away with a piece of it.
His photographs are
included in numerous institutional and private collections
around the
world such as Art of the 1960s: This was Tomorrow at Tate Britain (2004); How We Are: Photographing Britain (2007); and Roger Mayne: Aspects of a Great
Photographer at the Victorian Gallery, Bath (2013).