Vidéos : Berenice Abbott(En savoir plus sur Berenice Abbott) |
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Berenice Abbott: New York & ShanghaiBerenice Abbott's work has changed the way I look at Shanghai as her photographs and experience parallels my own outlook in rising metropolitan city. This is my tribute to her work and my own animated journal to Shanghai
Berenice AbbottThis is a presentational video I made for my digital photography class at California State Monterey Bay.
Visual Essay- Berenice AbbottVisual Essay
Berenice AbbottAbandonó Paris para hacer fotografías en Nueva York. La legendaria fotógrafa de la escena urbana neoyorkina de los años 30.
Changing New YorkThese photos are from the Berenice Abbott photography exhibition Changing New York. Douglas Levere decided to recreate Abbotts photographs by taking the exact same pictures to see how New York had changed.
libby.bereniceabbott.m4vthis is jake libby's creative interpretation of the life of Berenice Abbott and her photographs. this was a photo history project
Présentation de l'exposition Berenice AbbottL'exposition "Berenice Abbott (1898-1991), photographies" dévoile pour la première fois en France les différentes étapes de la carrière de cette photographe américaine. Cette rétrospective propose plus de 120 photographies, des ouvrages originaux et une série de documents inédits. En présentant des portraits, des photographies d'architecture et des prises de vue scientifiques, l'exposition montre les multiples facettes d'une œuvre souvent réduite à quelques images. [ www.jeudepaume.org ]
Berenice Abbott QuotesWhat was your favorite Berenice Abbott quote? 'Like' and leave a comment below, then jump over to quotetank.com and make a list of your favorites, so you'll never forget! We update our Twitter and Facebook with new quotes every few minutes, don't miss out! twitter.com | www.facebook.com If you enjoyed these quotes, please LIKE, SHARE and SUBSCRIBE! Who is Berenice Abbott? An American photographer best known for her black-and-white photography of New York City architecture and urban design of the 1930s. Berenice Abbott- NEW YORK CITY by elena dilasciowww.facebook.com
Berenice Abbott, Stroboscopic Image of Two Balls in Motion, c. 1958Learn more about photography Berenice Abbott and her science photographs. Presented by Cristina Trecha from the Ruben H. Fleet Science Center.
Hide/Seek: Portraits of Djuna Barnes and Janet FlannerDiscussion by David C. Ward, co-curator of "Hide/Seek" and Historian at the National Portrait Gallery. Janet Flanner (1892-1978) :In 1922, Janet Flanner settled in Paris with her lover, Solita Solano. She would spend the next fifty years writing her "Letter from Paris," a column that appeared regularly in the New Yorker. Flanner and Solano became fixtures in the salon life of the city, their homosexuality providing a crucial entrée into the most fashionable literary groups, which were then dominated by wealthy expatriate lesbians. Flanner signed her column with the decorously French and sexually ambiguous pseudonym "Genêt." She used "Genêt" to hide her identity, but like most masks, the name revealed as much as it hid. With her campy prose and focus on known gay and lesbian personalities, Flanner provided a knowing glimpse of the Paris "in" crowd. In this portrait by Berenice Abbott, Flanner wears two masks, which--like her pseudonym--suggest her multiple layers. Berenice Abbott (1898-1991) Gelatin silver print, 1927 Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress, Washington, DC Djuna Barnes (1892-1982): Berenice Abbott's photograph captures the sexually provocative appeal of Djuna Barnes, one of the leaders of 1920s modernism, both as a writer and personality. Brought up in a sexually extravagant and dysfunctional household (her father was a polygamist), Barnes had a tempestuous life. Her passage through postwar Europe and America was representative of the era's ...
Men and Women in GLBT History Part 1A short bio video about Berenice Abbott and some of her photography work. Catch me on BlogTV.com on Wednesday Nights @ 7PM www.blogtv.com
EcologicalMInd: Berenice Abbott- NEW YORK CITY (by elena dilascio).......................................... Il progetto EcologicalMind: 1) EcologicalMind • www.facebook.com 2) Ecologicalmind • www.facebook.com 3) CENSURIAMO LA CENSURA • www.facebook.com You Tube, il nostro canale: www.youtube.com .................... www.facebook.com
Canyons of Steel: New York City (Jazz Version)Photographs of New York City by Berenice Abbott, Margaret Bourke-White, Alvin Langdon Coburn, Andreas Feininger, Lewis Hine, WE James, Arthur Leipzig, Lisette Model, Jacob Riis, Cindy Sherman, Edward Steichen, Alfred Stieglitz, Paul Strand, Carl Van Vechten, and unknown photographers, interspersed with turn-of-the-century video clips by the American Mutoscope & Biograph Company and the Thomas Edison Company. Song: Brown's Little Jug by Les Brown, performed by Dave Pell. Created at animoto.com.
Montreal: A Photo Documentary (Fullscreen Youtube Version)This is a short photo documentary about Montreal inspire by Berenice Abbott's work of New York in the 1930s. This is called Montreal: A Documentary Film, the full length version is in pre-production and that will be called Montreal: A Photo Documentary
The Radical Camera: New York's Photo League, 1936-1951Drawing upon the depth of two great collections, the Columbus Museum of Art and The Jewish Museum in New York City collaborated on an exhibition of nearly 150 vintage photographs. The Radical Camera, a formidable survey of the Photo League's history and artistic significance, premiered at The Jewish Museum this autumn to rave reviews. The New York Times called The Radical Camera a "stirring show." The Radical Camera exhibition will be on view at the Columbus Museum of Art April 19, 2012 - September 9, 2012. The first museum exhibition in three decades to comprehensively look at the Photo League, The Radical Camera reveals that the League encouraged a surprisingly broad spectrum of work throughout extraordinarily turbulent times. The organization's members included some of the most noted photographers of the mid-20th century—W. Eugene Smith, Weegee, Lisette Model, Berenice Abbott and Aaron Siskind, to name a few. The Photo League helped validate photography as a fine art, presenting student work and guest exhibitions by established photographers such as Eugène Atget, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Edward Weston, among others. These affecting black and white photographs show life as it was lived mostly on the streets, sidewalks and subways of New York. Joy, playfulness, and caprice as well as poverty and hardship are in evidence. In addition to their urban focus, Leaguers photographed in rural America, and during World War II, in Latin America and Europe. The exhibition also ...
'Eugéne & Berenice - Pioneers of Urban Photography' - TRAILERwww.swimcinema.com Often called the father of modern photography, Frenchman Eugène Atget embraced a heartfelt realism that influenced generations of younger photographers—including an American, Berenice Abbott, who championed him in his later career and carried on his legacy. This film examines the work of both artists, juxtaposing Atget's Paris oeuvre with Abbott's views of New York, describing how their paths crossed amidst the Parisian avant-garde, shedding light on their unlikely connection to the surrealists, and helping viewers understand the aesthetic and personal bond they shared. Rare archival interview footage featuring Berenice Abbott is included, along with commentary from photographers working today. Duration 52 mins. Feature film and bonus materials are viewable on virtually any device -- computers, iPads, iPhones, digital TVs. DOWNLOAD feature film now from www.swimcinema.com
Montreal: A Photo Documentary (Widescreen Youtube Version)This is a short photo documentary of Montreal I made that is inspired by Berenice Abbott's work of New York in the 1930s. A full length version is in pre-production.
Great Women of Photography at the Lumiere GalleryLumiere Gallery presents Berenice Abbott and Imogen Cunningham exhibit. The gallery is located at the Galleries of Peachtree Hills, 425 Peachtree Hills Avenue suite 29B - Atlanta, GA 30305 (404) 261-6100 www.lumieregallery.net New York City of The Great Depressionhowtoarchitect.com www.powhow.com Learn with Doug via LIVE Webcam Classes at Powhow.com! Berenice Abbott's photography of New York City during the Great Depression is a window into the physical and psychological history of the city.
Canyons of Steel: New York City (Classical Version)Photographs of New York City by Berenice Abbott, Margaret Bourke-White, Alvin Langdon Coburn, Andreas Feininger, Lewis Hine, WE James, Arthur Leipzig, Lisette Model, Jacob Riis, Cindy Sherman, Edward Steichen, Alfred Stieglitz, Paul Strand, Carl Van Vechten, and unknown photographers, interspersed with turn-of-the-century video clips by the American Mutoscope & Biograph Company and the Thomas Edison Company. Music: Song: Allegro con brio from Symphony No. 5 by Ludwig van Beethoven. Created at animoto.com.
Barack Obama Final ReDoLumiere Gallery presents Berenice Abbott and Imogen Cunningham exhibit. The gallery is located at the Galleries of Peachtree Hills, 425 Peachtree Hills Avenue suite 29B - Atlanta, GA 30305 (404) 261-6100 www.lumieregallery.net
Masters of Photography - Eugéne AtgetPhotography by Eugéne Atget Atgets portrait, 1927 by Berenice Abbott ------------------------------- en.wikipedia.org Eugène Atget (1857 1927) was a French photographer noted for his photographs documenting the architecture and street scenes of Paris. Born outside the French city of Bordeaux, he was orphaned at seven and raised by his uncle. In the 1870s, Atget briefly became a sailor and cabin boy on liners in the Transatlantic. After shipping on several voyages, Atget became an actor, more specifically, a bit player, for a second-rate repertory company, but without much success. Atget finally settled in Paris in the 1890s, he saw photography as a source of income, selling his photographs to artists in the nearby town of Montparnasse. He advertised his photographs as "documents for artists." It was common practice at the time for painters to paint scenes from photographs. By 1899, he had moved to Montparnasse, where he lived and earned a modest income until his death in 1927. Distinguishing characteristics of Atget's photography include a wispy, drawn-out sense of light due to his long exposures, a fairly wide view that suggested space and ambiance more than surface detail, and an intentionally limited range of scenes avoiding the bustling modern Paris that was often around the corner from the nostalgia-steeped nooks he preferred. The emptiness of most of his streets and the sometimes blurred figures in those with people are partly due to his already antiquated technique ...
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