Sentences with phrase «photojournalist whose»

The Sunday Review section contains a portfolio of extraordinary images by Sebastião Salgado, a photojournalist whose camera has for 40 years focused on human suffering and its sources [and human toil].
Inevitably, at the opening Tuymans was asked about the recent judgement by a Belgian civil court, which ruled that his painting A Belgian Politician (2011) infringed on the copyright of the Flemish photojournalist whose photograph inspired it.
Jo - Anne McArthur — an award - winning photojournalist whose passion as an animal activist has informed her work in an ongoing project, «We Animals» — recounts her first forays into photography.
James Foley was the US photojournalist whose videotaped beheading in 2014 alerted the world to the threat posed by Isis.
Its cover photo seems certain to be one submitted and personally recommended by Sean O'Connell (Sean Penn), a revered nomadic photojournalist whose work Walter has edited for years without direct communication.

Not exact matches

On the civilian front, Mason Weaver (Brie Larson) is a tough, sexy «photojournalist» (a job that exists in the movies, not so much in real life) who senses the story of a lifetime, and Bill has also hired a tracker: former British special forces guy James Conrad (Hiddleston) whose alpha chops are established at the very beginning with a perfunctory fight in a bar.
The story of Burt Shavitz, the bearded, backwoodsy photojournalist - turned - homespun entrepreneur whose beekeeping and honey - selling business morphed into the Burt's Bees empire, «Burt's Buzz» spends its first hour as a charming character study of an idiosyncratic man who lives a ramshackle life («sort of like a high - class hobo») when he's not serving as the public face of a huge brand.
The staff and freelancers whose work appeared regularly in Life were among the greatest photojournalists of the 20th century.
Other contemporary artists whose works have been shown at the Pompidou Centre include contemporary photographers like Diane Arbus (1923 - 1971), Garry Winogrand (1928 - 84), Ed Ruscha (b. 1937), Nan Goldin (b. 1953) and Cindy Sherman (b. 1954), as well as photojournalists like Larry Burrows (1926 - 1971), Don McCullin (b. 1935), James Nachtwey (b. 1948) and Steve McCurry (b. 1950).
Environmentalist Cherry collaborates with photojournalist Braasch to distill the information in the latter's adult Earth under Fire (2007), adding examples of young people whose participation in citizen science projects through their schools supports the ongoing work of documenting these changes.
In her latest publishing foray she teams with photojournalist Gary Braasch, whose recent work Earth Under Fire: How Global Warming is Changing the World we reviewed here.
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