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Chapter_11_Photography.pptx

The Humanities Through the Arts Tenth Edition

Lee A. Jacobus │ F. David Martin

(NOTE: Pay particular attention to terms in italicized red font)

©McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom.  No reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.

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Chapter 11

Photography

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Introduction

First photograph, taken in 1839 by Louis Daguerre, was called Daguerreotypes.

Why would the French painter Paul Delaroche declare, “… painting is dead?”

Fig. 11-1. Paul Delaroche, Execution of Lady Jane Grey, 1843.

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Photographs and Painting: Early Photographers

Portraitists

Robert Howlett

Julia M. Cameron

Étienne Carjat

(Fig. 11-4 portrait of Charles Baudelaire, 1870)

Landscapist

Timothy O’Sullivan

(Fig. 11-5 Canyon de Chelley, 1873)

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The Pictorialists

The pictorialists aimed toward realistic detail and composition in photographs.

Structure was similar to paintings in the 1800s,with lighting being sharp and clearly defined, as in Alfred Stieglitz's early photo Paula (right).

Concentrated on soft focus and balanced symmetry and often sentimental in subject matter.

Fig. 11-6. Alfred Stieglitz, Sunrays, Paula. 1889.

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The f/64 Group

Alfred Stieglitz pioneered straight photography around 1905, striving for realism and perfection in technique.

f/64 comes from the small aperture on a camera which ensures that foreground, middle ground, and background are all in focus.

Notable photographers: Alfred Stieglitz (later), Edward Weston, Ansel Adams, Imogen Cunningham

Obsessed with a perfect print.

Fig. 11-8. Ansel Adams, Church, Taos Pueblo, 1941.

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The Documentarists, 1

Documentarists portray a world at one given moment.

Henry Cartier-Bresson captured images at their most intense points.

Eugène Atget photographed Paris extensively.

Paul Strand photographed people and buildings on Wall Street.

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The Documentarists, 2

Dorothea Lange and Walker Evans took part in a federal program to give work to photographers during the Great Depression of the 1930s.

These photos tend to humanize the viewer’s relationship with the subject matter, as in Lange’s Migrant Mother, 1936 (right).

Fig. 11-12

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The Modern Eye

Modern photography covers a multitude of different subject matter, technique, style, and composition.

A rebellion against earlier movements; has low technical demands, allows for cluttered composition, and catches reality

Nan Goldin, Bruce Davidson, Carrie Mae Weems, Tina Barney

Fig. 11-18. The Europeans: The Hands, Tina Barney, 2003.

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Digital Photography

Today, most fine-art photographs are digital.

They can be infinitely altered and do not have to print only what a camera sees.

Multiple photos can be layered for depth.

Cindy Sherman, Wang Qingsong, Bill Gekas, Gregory Crewdson are notable digital photographers.

Fig. 11-19. Cindy Sherman, Untitled #466. 2008.

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Wrap-Up of the Chapter: Terms and People to Remember

Terms

Daguerreotypes

Pictorialists

Straight photography

f/64 Group

Documentarists

Modern photography

Digital photography

People

Robert Howlett

Julia M. Cameron

Étienne Carjat

Timothy O’Sullivan

Alfred Stieglitz

Dorothea Lange

Walker Evans

Berenice Abbott

People

Edward Weston

Ansel Adams

Imogen Cunningham

Henry Cartier-Bresson

Eugène Atget

Louis Daguerre

Bruce Davidson

Cindy Sherman

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