Wednesday, 30 March 2016

Sally Mann



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Sally MannneĆ© Sally Munger (born May 1, 1951LexingtonVirginia, U.S.), American photographer whose powerful images of childhood, sexuality, and death were often deemed controversial.Mann was introduced to photography by her father, Robert Munger, a physician who photographed her nude as a girl. In 1969, as a teenager, she took up photography in Vermont at the Putney School and then spent two years at Bennington College, where she studied with photographer Norman Sieff and met and proposed to the man who became her husband, Larry Mann. 

Nick Ut



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Nick Ut, whose real name is Ut Cong Huynh, was born in Vietnam. His oldest brother, My Thanh Huynh, was an AP photographer who was killed in combat in 1965. Nick Ut began his career as a photographer with the AP in Saigon in 1966 and covered the rest of the war. There were many close calls for Nick while covering the war. When the Americans and South Vietnamese invaded Cambodia in 1970, he was wounded three times. The highlight of Nick’s career came on a rainy day on June 8 1972 when he photographed nine year old Kim Phuc, running and screaming down Route 1 naked. It was near Trang Bang village in Vietnam, after a misdirected napalm bomb was dropped on her family home by a South Vietnamese plane. Seventy five per cent of her body was scorched with third degree burns. Nick captured the little girl on film and then rushed her to a hospital, which saved her life. 

Mark Seliger



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Seliger’s photographs capture the artists in their own atmosphere, giving the audiences a classic look at what the group or artist represents. His style of photography brings together classic styles with more modern looks. Seliger is currently employed by Conde Nast Publications in New York. He continues to provide them with photographs of some of the most influential and recognizable individualsThe photographs he has taken are timeless visualisations of society. His portrait work takes a wide range of subjects.

Andreas Gursky



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 large-scale photographs, Andreas Gursky captures the modern world, and its landscapes, people, architecture, and industries, in seductive detail. Shot from an elevated perspective and produced on an epic scale, Gursky’s images show the individual or granular supermarket products, soccer players, windows on a building, or islands in the sea subsumed by the masses or the environment. Drawing influence from his schooling under Bernd and Hilla Becher, Gursky rigorously composes his expansive views to envelop viewers with dizzying scale, detail, and color—effects he often heightens through digital manipulation. “In the end I decided to digitalize the pictures and leave out elements that bothered me,” he said of his “Rhine” photographs (1999), one of which set the record in late 2011 for the highest price ever paid for a photograph at auction.

Terry Richardson



















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Terry Richardson is a fashion photographer who takes picture for popular models, I like Richard color grading of his picture. And his stlye of taking picture is different angle

Joel Meyerowitz



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Joel Meyerowitz is an award-winning photographer who has worked in many various museums and galleries. He became a street photographer in the traditional of Henry Jolo and also work exclusively in colours. Within a few days of the 9/11 attacks in New York, Meyerowitz began to create an archive of the destruction and recovery in and around Ground Zero. The World Trade Center Archive now includes over 8,000 images, and will be available for research, exhibition, and publication at museums in New York and Washington, DC. Most of his pictures use color grading and heights for local areas, He is unique in his style, Meyerowitz was instrumental in changing the attitude toward the use of color photography from one of resistance to nearly universal acceptance. His first book, Cape Light, is considered a classic work of color.