Ballet

A friend told me about the photographer, Bruce Monk. This image is called, “Swans” which I have to assume is from Swan Lake. Sometimes when we document someone elses art (i.e., dance, architecture), it is difficult to do anything other than record, and therefore, how do we interpret it and make it our own in a photograph? I think this is a good example of creating art from art rather than simply recording it.

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This really bothers me!  How does this work?  How is it that our eyes, like photography, “develop” a positive image […]

What I should have done was to put these photographs in chronological order, for then we would see the development […]

see more posts Blog The purpose of this blog My website says I’ve been a photographer since I was seven […]

In 2005, Pep Bonet won the W. Eugene Smith Humanistic Grant in Photography.  He has won numerous other awards, too, and is a […]

Last night I gave my son my first Nikon for his photography class.  Ahh, to hold a film camera again.  […]

With the recent release of “The Lost Photographs of Captain Scott” (Robert Falcon Scott’s Lost Photographs — click here to […]

While this is not related to photography, it is related to art and the subject of copyright.  To familiarize yourself […]

What I would call, “provocative”. Photo: Albert Watson What I would call, “theatrical”. Photo: Adolph de Meyer What I would […]

Sometimes, if an image is successful, it needs no words, but also, no analytics or criticism. For the REALLY successful […]

Here are two photographs featuring children from current shows: Children playing on Omaha beach, Normandy, France, 1947 Photo: Chim (David […]

I have to think I may eventually be doing a “Hats Off, Part II” since researching hats and all things […]

Andres de Dienes, while best known for his glamour portraits of Hollywood legends and in particular, his photographs of Marilyn […]

A friend told me about the photographer, Bruce Monk. This image is called, “Swans” which I have to assume is […]

Kertész’s photography at first glance is understated, sometimes playful, sometimes ordinary, but upon further inspection, it is as if it […]

A Life Magazine photographer from 1965-1972, Lennart Nilsson was recognized for his microscopic photography of the human body and in […]

Believe it or not, this photograph was taken at the London Zoo in 1946. (Photographer unknown.) Turtle Wax, Inc., was […]

For fine art enthusiasts and animal aficionados alike, Tim Flach‘s work appeals on many levels — from the purely aesthetic […]

“The Stranger in the Glass Box” is a series of photographs that Quentin Shih created for Christian Dior. Our Latest […]

Rong Rong is a Beijing based photographer who was born impoverished and worked in his father’s grocery store in a […]

“Homage to love” evokes a powerful sentiment that can be beautifully expressed through various artistic mediums, including photography.  This is […]

“Genius” was the word that came to mind when looking through Jill Freedman‘s series entitled, “Jill’s Dogs”. I will include […]

My first introduction to Guy Bourdin and probably a notable reference for many photographers is that of his Charles Jourdan […]

Even if you don’t celebrate Easter, I hope you enjoy the photographs if for only that you like rabbits and […]

Frank Hurley was the photographer who documented Ernest Shackleton’s Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition that set out in 1914. To say I […]

I concur with the sentiment expressed in this shot. (Hooray Yankees!) Fans in Times Square after the Yankees win the […]

Photographs representing the theme of multiples… Photo credits (in alphabetical order by first name–apologies for that as I previously specified […]

Photographer unknown see more posts Blog Marc Riboud Disclaimer: This post does not do Marc Riboud justice! There is the […]

My friend, Ken Pivak, has been working on a new series he calls, “Housewives”. He works in collaboration with his […]

It was Nancy Davidson’s inflatable sculptures that first caught my eye. I instantly became an admirer, what with her ability […]

Snapshots are folk art and you can’t discount folk art as an art form. Think of snapshots as today’s Daguerreotypes […]

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