A CLEAR VIEW OF THE WORLD

Search Results for: Robert Frank – Page 2

Jim and Sarina's first child, Washington DC, 1990. © Eugene Richards

Eugene Richards, In This Brief Life

Having sifted through his archives, Eugene Richards, the masterful American documentary photographer, launches a fundraising appeal for his new book, In This Brief Life. The volume represents an intimate look at a fifty-year-long career with handpicked, mostly unpublished images. Blind talks with the photographer.

Untitled from Days at Sea, 1974 © Ralph Gibson

Ralph Gibson, Perfect Harmony 

Blind met Ralph Gibson in Paris. The American photographer talks about his latest book Refractions 2, his vision of photography, and his quest for a third language combining image and music.

Allan Porter, Editor of Camera, Dies at 88

The American journalist and former figure of the Swiss magazine Camera, who was a reference between the 1920s and 1980s, died on October 5, in anonymity. He had contributed to launching the career of many great photographers.

Threads of History and Modernity

The French Academy in Rome presents Florence and Damien Bachelot’s photography collection, at Villa Medici.

Lima #61, 1975. © Jed Fielding

Jed Fielding: Out on the Street

Encounter, Jed Fielding’s eye-candy of a book published by the Museum of Photographic Arts in San Diego, captures city residents who, even as they face the consequences of economic and political crises, enjoy life to the fullest. The book opens a door to the history of the world’s streets.

Louis Faurer, Victoria Movie Theatre Marquee, Times Square, N.Y.C, 1949. © Estate of Louis Faurer, Courtesy Deborah Bell Gallery, Courtesy les Douches la Galerie, Paris

​Louis Faurer, the Melancholy Watcher

Les Douches la Galerie, in Paris, presents about twenty of Louis Faurer’s prints, mainly in the streets of New York, between 1937 and 1950. The “The Melancholy Watcher” exhibition is the quintessence of his art.

William Klein, Fondation Nationale de la Photographie, Lyon, 1978 © Jacques Revon

William Klein: The Life of a Nonconformist Photographer

The American photographer, who became known for his street and fashion images, died peacefully on September 10 at the age of 96 in Paris, his beloved city. Blind traces the career of the man who helped revolutionize photography.

© Babette Mangolte

Movement and Space Through the Eyes of Babette Mangolte

The photographer, filmmaker, cinematographer, artist, and author of critical essays Babette Mangolte is being honored with the Women in Motion Photography Prize at the Rencontres d’Arles photography showcase for her body of work, which spans fifty years and has focused on dance, performance, cinema experimental cinema, subjectivity and the spectator.

DAVID BAILEY

Music and Photography: Two Great Tastes That Go Together

“For the Record: Photography and the art of the Album Cover” is a musical trawl through the history of photography. Curated from the collection of Antoine de Beaupré, it features images by the great, the anonymous, and the forgotten.

Jeanloup Sieff

Jeanloup Sieff : A Photographic Journey in the Death Valley

Through the publication of a biography by Claude Nori and the reissue of La Vallée de la Mort [Death Valley], a work published in the 1970s that has been out of print for more than a decade, Contrejour editions are once again shining the spotlight on Jeanloup Sieff, who passed away in 2000.

The WSPU Union book © Collection Museum of London

Unwriting Photobook History

In 2004,  The Photobook History Volume 1 was published. Written by photographer Martin Parr and author Gerry Badger, it led to a flurry of interest

Nobuyoshi Araki: The Experience of a Lifetime

Nobuyoshi Araki: The Experience of a Lifetime

The 101 photographs that make up Nobuyoshi Araki’s Shi Nikki, or the Private Diary only he knows how to unlock, are featured for the first time in their entirety at the Bourse de Commerce-Pinault Collection in Paris. This is a great introduction to the unclassifiable work of the Japanese photographer who puts the “I” in the foreground.

Blue Sky, Sunshine, White Sand by the Mile

Blue Sky, Sunshine, White Sand by the Mile

“I wasn’t trying to be like the guy who photographed my Bar Mitzvah, someone who comes in to please everyone. I wish it was Diane Arbus who took the pictures of my Bar Mitzvah,” says Jewish-American photographer Godlis, remembering the 1974 trip to Florida that changed his life — pictures from which have just been published in the new book Godlis: Miami.

Ralph Gibson: "I Am an Insider, Not an Observer"

Ralph Gibson: “I Am an Insider, Not an Observer”

On November 4, 2021, as part of Leica‘s celebration of photography, American photographer Ralph Gibson received the Leica Hall of Fame Award 2021 for Lifetime Achievement. He is also being honored with a retrospective exhibition, on view through the end of February 2022, at the Leica Gallery in Wetzlar, Germany.

Annie Leibovitz: “A lot can be told in those moments in between the main moments”

Annie Leibovitz: “A lot can be told in those moments in between the main moments”

She is one of the world’s most iconic portrait artists who, over five decades, has consecrated some of America’s biggest celebrities. Recipient of the William Klein Photography Award from the Académie des Beaux-Arts, Annie Leibovitz is the subject of an exhibition at the Institut de France, in Paris, while simultaneously releasing her first book devoted entirely to the world of fashion.

Barkley L. Hendricks' Little Known Photography

Barkley L. Hendricks’ Little Known Photography

A captivating new book celebrates the role photography played in the life and work of Barkley L. Hendricks, who made pioneering contributions to Black portraiture and conceptualism.

A History of Documentary Photography, Part II

A History of Documentary Photography, Part II

The peculiar thing about documentary photography is that, since the inception of the medium, documenting has been the very purpose of photography as a whole. Here, historian Guillaume Blanc continues his in-depth look at what many consider to be the nobility of photography. Read the first part of the course here if needed.

A History of Portrait Photography, Part II

A History of Portrait Photography, Part II

In this second part of our lesson on the history of portrait photography, the historian Guillaume Blanc continues his exploration of the genre by theme, starting with the social question. Read the first part of the course here if needed.

Book Advice: Fine Art Portraits

Book Advice: Fine Art Portraits

In this selection, you will find the most important photo books of photo portrait history. These include the works from the greatest photographers that have highly influenced the art form, from the fashion world to socially oriented subjects. Ranging from different time periods and artistic intentions, this list is a great starting place to dive into the essence of portraiture.

Le New York analogique de Sid Kaplan

Sid Kaplan’s Analog New York

A show of New York native Sid Kaplan’s work is currently on view at Les Douches Galerie in Paris. It’s the first time his oeuvre has been shown in France.

The Plaines of America by Joel Sternfeld

The Plaines of America by Joel Sternfeld

To celebrate an expanded edition of American Prospects (first ed. 1987), released by Steidl in November, the Xippas Gallery is showcasing for the first time thirteen photographs selected by the artist.

The W. Eugene Smith Grant awarded to Yael Martinez

The W. Eugene Smith Grant awarded to Yael Martinez

On October 17, 2019, photographer Yael Martinez won the W. Eugene Smith Grant in Humanistic Photography for his projet entitled “The House that Bleeds”. It is among the oldest photography awards and it is presented annually to a photographer whose work follows the humanistic tradition of W. Eugene Smith.

Remembering John Cohen

Remembering John Cohen

The photographer who captured old time American musicians leaves behind an astonishing legacy.

At the MEP, noir is photography

At the MEP, noir is photography

The Maison Européenne de la Photographie (MEP) has drawn on its impressive collection of 25,000 works to create an exceptional exhibition on the theme of noir, with clear implications for photography!

Coreen Simpson, A Creative Force Between Images and Jewelry

The photographer, writer, and jewelry designer has spent more than five decades documenting the cultural, artistic, and stylistic identity of Black America. Her first major monograph has just been published by Aperture.

The Vision Behind “Black is Beautiful”

The exhibition “Black is Beautiful” celebrates the vision of Kwame Brathwaite, the Brooklyn-born photographer who popularized the phrase and helped shape a bold aesthetic of Black pride in the 1960s.

Auto-stoppeuses, 1936 Tirage d’origine © Paul Wolff / Collection Christian Brandstätter

Dr. Paul Wolff: Between Light and Shadows

The best-known German photographer of the interwar period, Paul Wolff is nevertheless a forgotten figure in the history of photography. How can one explain the astonishing disappearance of such a witness to a Germany that was undergoing both renewal and the darkest hours of its history? The first retrospective devoted to his work in France lifts part of the mystery of Paul Wolff, between light and shadow.

USA. Hollywood. US actress Marilyn MONROE resting between takes during a photographic studio session in Hollywood (Paramount Gallery), for the making of the film "The Misfits". Directed by John HUSTON (USA). Nevada. Screenplay by Arthur MILLER (USA). 1960.

The Essential Eve

Opened since July 1, the Newlands House Gallery in England hosts the first Eve Arnold exhibition in 10 years.

Elliott Erwitt en réflexion, Tropicana Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada, États-Unis, 1957 © Elliott Erwitt / Magnum Photos

Elliott Erwitt: An Explosion of Color

The Maillol Museum in Paris devotes a stunning retrospective to the iconic American photographer Elliott Erwitt. The exhibition takes us through a full career made up of moments of fun and turning points in history.

Novak Djokovic, Open d’Australie, 2018. © Nicolas Luttiau, L'Équipe.

Sports Photography: A World Apart?

While the cultural world has recently begun opening up to all photographic genres, dismantling the hierarchies between fashion, reportage, amateur, etc. practice, sports photography has been left outside this momentum. For now.

© The Anonymous Project / Lee Shulman

The Anonymous Project: Slide Attitude

Lee Shulman, the creator of The Anonymous Project, invited Blind to his small Parisian studio. The collector and his team receive, select and sort thousands of slides of unknown people and give them a second life.