A new PRO link has been added. It’s John Keatley whos got an amazing body of work with celebs and other great folks. He also run an exception blog what’s here – http://www.keatleyphoto.com/blog/
enjoy
Filed under: Masters of Photography
July 24, 2009 • 11:02 pm 0
A new PRO link has been added. It’s John Keatley whos got an amazing body of work with celebs and other great folks. He also run an exception blog what’s here – http://www.keatleyphoto.com/blog/
enjoy
Filed under: Masters of Photography
April 23, 2009 • 10:39 pm 0
Fantastic images filled with personal memoairs and style. A uniqe travel in history of photography and the sociology of photography in America. I dear to say – being a woman photogrpher at the time is about the same as try to become a coal miner or a president.
A video about Gertrude Käsebier
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Uh0l-Qh6lQ
History, published by Anne Douglas at http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/american_artists/88126
Gertrude Stanton was born on May 18, 1852 in Des Moines, Iowa. In 1859 her father opened a sawmill in the Colorado Territory and the family joined him there a year later. By 1864 the Stanton family moved to Brooklyn, New York. Gertrude’s father died soon after, and her mother began to take in boarders to make ends meet. One boarder was Eduard Kasebier, a German importer of shellac. Eduard and Gertrude were married in 1874, on Gertrude’s twenty-second birthday.
The marriage pleased Gertrude’s mother. Gertrude had always been spirited and independent, and her mother believed that a husband and children would help settle her down. Gertrude never abandoned her dreams of being an artist, however, and began to study drawing and painting at the Pratt Institute in 1889, when she was 37 and her youngest child was 9. About the same time Gertrude started photographing her family, and in 1894 she traveled to Europe to study photography and painting.
NOTE! THIS ARTICLE PUBLISHED HERE BY Anne Douglas at http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/american_artists/88126
In 1897 Gertrude Kasebier opened a portrait studio in New York. Her husband did not encourage her in this pursuit, believing it was a disgrace to the family. Nevertheless, Gertrude’s studio was very successful and she was widely regarded as one of the leading portrait photographers of the day. She exhibited her photographs with the Philadelphia Photographic Society and became a founding member of Alfred Stieglitz’s Photo Secession group. This group sought to elevate photography from its documentary nature to a fine art; by using textured papers and manipulating her negatives, Gertrude produced final prints much closer to Old Master compositions than to the photographs of many of her contemporaries.
Gertrude Kasebier photographed many celebrities of her time, including Auguste Rodin, Buffalo Bill, Booker T. Washington, and Mark Twain, but the images for which she is best known are of her family and friends and celebrate motherhood. Her photographs typically were soft and hazy, almost opalescent, and emotionally complex, portraying women as nurturing, spiritual, maternal beings.
Full aricle here: http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/american_artists/88126
Still images can be find here:
http://www.leegallery.com/kasebier.html
Information about exhebition:
http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/kasebier_gertrude.html
Filed under: Masters of Photography, Video , Gertrude Käsebier video photography old time black and white adam varga blog edinburgh scotland magyar foto