famous fine art photographers part1

Most Famous Fine Art Photographers and Their Immortal Art Photography (Part-1)

Fine art Photography also known also as “artistic photography” refers the expression of artist’s perceptions and emotions and to share them with others though the art of photography. It is the best innovative type of photography that lets the most famous fine art photographers uses their creativeness to capture photographs. In this post we are introducing biography & photography of world’s best fine art photographers & the legends of photography.  So let’s have a look.

Here is a list of the legends & most famous fine art photographers. We also illustrate their short biography & some of their great photographs.

Ansel Adams (1902-1984)

Photographer Ansel Adams

Ansel Adams was born on February 20, 1902, in San Francisco, California. Adams rose to prominence as a photographer of the American West, particularly Yosemite National Park, using his work to promote conservation of wilderness areas. His iconic black-and-white images helped to establish photography among the fine arts. He died in Monterey, California, on April 22, 1984.
Ansel Adams was a master of fine art photography. He would pour 18 hours a day into his labor of love, his art. Neither he, nor his camera, knew the meaning of a day “off.” He loved his work though, and it shows. His photographs are legends and some of his classics include Mt. McKinley, Wonder Lake, Half Dome, Merced River, Winter, Rose and Driftwood , Jeffery Pine Sentinel Dome and Moon and Half Dome. He was a huge activist for the environment and the wilderness.
Adams received a Doctor of Arts from both Harvard and Yale universities. He was awarded the Conservation Service Award by the Department of Interior in 1968, a Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980, and the Sierra Club John Muir Award in 1963, and was inducted into the California Hall of Fame by California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and First Lady Maria Shriver in 2007.
The Minarets Wilderness in the Inyo National Forest and an 11,760-foot (3,580 m) peak therein were renamed the Ansel Adams Wilderness and Mount Ansel Adams respectively in 1985.
The Sierra Club’s Ansel Adams Award for Conservation Photography was established in 1971, and the Ansel Adams Award for Conservation was established in 1980 by The Wilderness Society.
Website:   Ansel Adams Photography   www.anseladams.com

Ansel Adams was born on February 20, 1902, in San Francisco, California. Adams rose to prominence as a photographer of the American West, particularly Yosemite National Park, using his work to promote conservation of wilderness areas. His iconic black-and-white images helped to establish photography among the fine arts. He died in Monterey, California, on April 22, 1984. Ansel Adams was a master of fine art photography. He would pour 18 hours a day into his labor of love, his art.

Neither he, nor his camera, knew the meaning of a day “off.” He loved his work though, and it shows. His photographs are legends and some of his classics include Mt. McKinley, Wonder Lake, Half Dome, Merced River, Winter, Rose and Driftwood , Jeffery Pine Sentinel Dome and Moon and Half Dome. He was a huge activist for the environment and the wilderness.Adams received a Doctor of Arts from both Harvard and Yale universities.

He was awarded the Conservation Service Award by the Department of Interior in 1968, a Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980, and the Sierra Club John Muir Award in 1963, and was inducted into the California Hall of Fame by California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and First Lady Maria Shriver in 2007.

The Minarets Wilderness in the Inyo National Forest and an 11,760-foot (3,580 m) peak therein were renamed the Ansel Adams Wilderness and Mount Ansel Adams respectively in 1985.

The Sierra Club’s Ansel Adams Award for Conservation Photography was established in 1971, and the Ansel Adams Award for Conservation was established in 1980 by The Wilderness Society.

Website:   www.anseladams.com

Ansel Adams Photography:-

Ansel Adams Photography

Ansel Adams Photography

Ansel Adams Photography

Oscar Gustave Rejlander (1813-1875)

Photographer Oscar Gustave Rejlander

Oscar Gustave Rejlander (Sweden 1813 – Clapham, London on 18 January 1875) was a pioneering Victorian art photographer.He is a Swedish painter and a photographer who is known as the “father of art photography.”

Rejlander received his general education in Sweden, and he studied painting and sculpture in Rome. After considerable travel he settled in England and from 1853 practiced photography there. Rejlander rejected contemporary conceptions of photography as a scientific or technical medium.

In his efforts to elevate photography to the status of a fine art, he made photographs in imitation of painting. He looked to the example of the Old Masters for their use of composition and pose and often set up his own elaborate compositions in his studio. In many of his works he sought painterly effects by combining several negatives to make one print, with a resulting image that moved beyond the results achieved by straightforward photography.

His most famous work, The Two Ways of Life (1857), was based on the background and arrangement of Raphael’s School of Athens (1509–11) and was created by combining more than 30 negatives. Shown in the Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition of 1857, the photograph was purchased by Queen Victoria as a gift for Prince Albert. Rejlander was also well known for his ability to capture an emotion or sentiment in his work. A series of photographs of facial expressions and gestures made by Rejlander was used by Charles Darwin in his Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals (1872).

Although he had a period of critical acclaim, Rejlander died impoverished. His influence extended for decades, however, as photographers began to debate the merits of Pictorialism, or the effort to achieve painterly effects, versus the value of more sharply detailed work.

 

Oscar Gustave Rejlander Photography :-
 
Oscar Gustave Rejlander Photography
 
Oscar Gustave Rejlander Photography
 
Oscar Gustave Rejlander Photography
 
Julia Margaret Cameron (1815-1879)
 
Photographer Julia Margaret Cameron

 

Julia Margaret Pattle was born in British India, on June 11, 1815, the daughter of an official in the Bengal Civil Service and a descendant of the French aristocracy. After her early years she received an education in France and England, returning to India in 1834. Four years later, in 1838, she married Charles Hay Cameron, twenty years her senior (Lukitsh 285).
In 1848, after Charles retired, he and Julia returned to England where they raised five children, adding a sixth in 1857 when they adopted Mary Ryan. Through Julia’s sister, Sarah Prinsep, the new arrivals cultivated a wide circle of elite, intellectual friends. It is this company of friends, family, and servants that Cameron used as models for her “tableux vivants”.
Julia Margaret Cameron was a largely talented, highly intelligent, free-spirited, eccentric, financially comfortable English woman who took up photography as a personal adventure, as she might have taken up philanthropy or rose culture.
In 1864 her daughter, who hoped to supply her mother with a hobby, gave her a camera. Photography, though still in its infancy at this time, had been featured strongly in the Great Exhibition in 1851.
Cameron began experimenting with wet collodion negatives printed on albumen paper, a difficult and messy process. She was influenced and encouraged by her friend and mentor, the astronomer Sir John Herschel; the painter George Frederic Watts; and David Wilkie Wynfield, a successful photographer of the era.
Whether Cameron was shooting portraits of famous figures of the day or “tableaux vivants,” theatrical stagings of moments in history and literature, she utilized a soft-focus technique. Many of her subjects involved women and their roles in contemporary life. Her most important work was a series of photographic illustrations for Tennyson’s Idylls of the King. Beginning in 1874, she produced approximately 180 photographs in preparation for this work.
Although Cameron began her photographic career as a hobby, it became a method for supplementing her family’s dwindling resources. She sold her work through Colnaghi and Company in London and participated in numerous exhibitions both in England and abroad.
In 1875 she had her family moved back to Ceylon. After leaving England, she produced very little photographic work, leaving the illustrations for the Idylls as the culmination of her work. She died in Ceylon in January 1879.

Julia Margaret Cameron Photography:-

 

Julia Margaret Cameron Photography

 

Julia Margaret Cameron Photography

 

Julia Margaret Cameron Photography

 

Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946)

Photographer Alfred Stieglitz

Through his activities as a photographer, critic, dealer, and theorist, Alfred Stieglitz had a decisive influence on the development of modern art in America during the early twentieth century. Born in 1864 in New Jersey, Stieglitz moved with his family to Manhattan in 1871 and to Germany in 1881.

Enrolled in 1882 as a student of mechanical engineering in the Technische Hochschule (technical high school) in Berlin, he was first exposed to photography when he took a photochemistry course in 1883. From then on he was involved with photography, first as a technical and scientific challenge, later as an artistic one.

Stieglitz returned to the United States in 1890 where he obtained a reputation as a photographer who liked to overcome technical problems. This including taking the first successful photographs in snow and rain. He also experimented with flash powder so that he could take photographs at night.

Stieglitz was the most influential member of the Club for American Amateur Photographers. A member of the Camera Club he joined with Clarence White, Edward Steichen, Alvin Langdon Coburn, and Gertrude Kasebier in 1902 to form the Photo secession Group.

During the 1930’s, Stieglitz took a series of portraits of Dorothy Norman and O’Keeffe.  These photographs were the first to recognize the artistic potential of isolated parts of the human body. In 1933, Stieglitz presented a gift of more than 1,000 works of art from over 100 artists to the Metropolitan Museum of Art and in 1941; the Museum of Modern Art acquired a group of Stieglitz’s photographs.

Stieglitz was forced to retire in 1937, due to a heart disease. Stieglitz died on July 13, 1946, at the age of 82.

Alfred Stieglitz Photography :-

 

Alfred Stieglitz Photography

 

Alfred Stieglitz Photography

 

Alfred Stieglitz Photography

 

Edward Steichen (1879-1973)

Photographer Edward Steichen

 

Edward Steichen was an American fine art photographer, painter, and museum curator who helped transform photography into an art form and one of the most important figures in the history of photography. At the turn of the century his photographs were hailed for their artistic quality. In the 1920s he produced a new style of fashion illustration and portraiture for magazines.

Edward Steichen was born in Luxembourg on 27th March, 1879. When Edward was three years old his family moved to the United States and eventually settled in Hancock, Michigan.

Steichen took up photography in 1895, at the age of sixteen, and was self-taught. During his early career, around the turn of the century, he was associated with a style of photography known as Pictorialism. The Pictorialists felt that the aesthetic promise of photography lay in an emulation of painting. Steichenís early work, then, adopted many Pictorialist techniques (a jiggled tripod, a lens bathed in glycerin, or various darkroom tricks) designed to produce ìpainterlyî soft-focus effects. During this period, Steichen was also a painter, until he burned all his canvases in 1922.

In 1905, with Stieglitz, he founded the famous Little Galleries of the Photo Secession at 291 Fifth Avenue in New York (later the 291 Gallery) to promote photography as an art form in particular, and European Modernism in general. Steichen soon came under the spell of the new art movements with their abstract geometries, and he gradually abandoned his Pictorialism in favor of straight photography with a strong sense of design and clean, uncluttered images and compositions. Steichen went on to command the photographic division of the U.S. Expeditionary Forces in World War I, and to direct the Naval Photographic Institute in World War II. During the 1920s and 1930s he worked as a commercial photographer for Conde N&aacutest publications including Vogue and Vanity Fair, and from 1947-1962 was Director of the Department of Photography at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In 1955, he organized the famous Family of Man exhibition which toured the world.

 

Website: ww.artcyclopedia.com/artists/steichen_edward_j.html

Edward Steichen Photography:-

 

Edward Steichen Photoghraphy

 

Edward Steichen Photoghraphy

 

Edward Steichen Photoghraphy

 

Edward Weston (1886-1958)

 

Photographer Edward Weston

Edward Henry Weston was born March 24, 1886, in Highland Park, Illinois.  He spent the majority of his childhood in Chicago where he attended Oakland Grammar School. He began photographing at the age of sixteen after receiving a Bull’s Eye #2 camera from his father.

Edward Weston was renowned as one of the masters of 20th century photography. His legacy includes several thousand carefully composed, superbly printed photographs, which have influenced photographers around the world. Photographing natural landscapes and forms such as artichoke, shells, and rocks, using large-format cameras and available light. Weston’s sensuously precise images rise to the level of poetry. The subtle use of tones and the sculptural formal design of his works have become the standards by which much later photographic practice has been judged.  Ansel Adams has written: “Weston is, in the real sense, one of the few creative artists. He has recreated the matter-forms and forces of nature; he has made these forms eloquent of the fundamental unity of the world. His work illuminates man’s inner journey toward perfection of the spirit.”

Weston was greatly influenced by a visit to an exhibition of modern art at the San Francisco World Fair in 1915. His work became much more experimental and by the end of the First World War he had began to place a new emphasis on abstract forms.

In 1922 Weston met Alfred Stieglitz and Paul Strand in New York City. After looking at their work he became convinced that “the camera should be used for a recording of life, for rendering the very substance and quintessence of the thing itself, whether it be polished steel or palpitating flesh.”

Weston opened a new studio in San Francisco in 1928. He began photographing natural landscapes and objects. Weston used a large-format camera with a small aperture, to achieve the greatest possible depth of field and resolution of detail. In 1932 Weston joined with Imogen Cunningham and Ansel Adams to form Group f/64.

In 1935 Franklin D. Roosevelt established the Works Projects Administration (WPA) as part of the New Deal attempt to combat the Depression. This included the Federal Art Project (FAP) that provided finance for the employment of artists. As well as artists, FAP also employed photographers, and Weston was involved in work in New Mexico and California.

Books produced by Weston include The Art of Edward Weston (1932), California and the West (1940), Leaves of Grass (1940), based on the writings of Walt Whitman, and My Camera on Point Lobos (1950). Edward Weston died in Carmel, California, on 1st January, 1958.

Website: www.edward-weston.com

Edward Weston Photography:-

Edward Weston Photography

 

Edward Weston Photography

 

Edward Weston Photography

 

Paul Strand (1890-1976)

Photographer Paul Strand

 

Paul Strand was born in New York in 1890. When he was 17 years old, he began taking photography courses, studying under famed photographer Lewis Hine. During his training, Strand also became acquainted with Alfred Stieglitz, who’s 291 Gallery in New York provided inspiration for Strand and other aspiring modernist photographers and artists.

Strand believed in the redemptive power of art that is rooted in the reality of everyday life, and was an articulate advocate for a “pure” aesthetic in creative photography. Believing in the “absolute unqualified objectivity” of photography, Strand created tightly structured compositions printed in rich chiaroscuro, innovative for their authenticity and dynamism.

His early subjects included street people of New York, nudes of his wife Rebecca, still lifes, landscapes of New Mexico, and experiments with abstraction and movement. By 1916 his work was championed by Steiglitz with solo exhibitions at 291 and publication in Camera Work’s final issues, devoted exclusively to his photographs.

An active filmmaker through the 1920s and 1930s, Strand returned to his interest in portraiture by the mid-1940s when his primary goal was to reveal the essential character of his subject with its physical and psychological ties to the larger world.

Motivated by his ideology and influenced by his experience in film, he created a series of cultural portraits, exploring both the portfolio and book form: Photographs of Mexico (1940), Time in New England (1950), Un Paese (1955), Tir a’Mhurain: Outer Hebrides (1968), Living Egypt (1969), and Ghana: An African Portrait (1976). He immigrated to France in 1950 in response to the growing oppression of McCarthyism.

His films included:

• Manhatta (1921) – by Paul Strand and Charles Sheeler

• The Wave (1936)

• The Plow That Broke the Plains (1936)

• The Heart of Spain (1937)

• Native Land (1942)

• It’s Up to You (1943)

Website: wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Strand

Paul Strand Photography:-

 

Paul Strand Photography

Paul Strand Photography

Paul Strand Photography

Man Ray (1890-1976)

Photographer Man Ray

Man Ray was a pioneer in 20th century avant-garde art and fine art photography and a leading figure in the Dada and Surrealist art movements in both America and in France, where he lived for many years.  He was born Emmanuel Radnitzky on 20th August 1890 in Philadelphia.

He was the most well-known representative of avant-garde photography in 1930 and is regarded as a pioneer of Surrealist photography. His work is extremely eclectic – as painter, object artist, film maker and photographer, he is part of the Dada and Surrealist movements.

Man Ray was the first artist whose photographs were more valuable to collectors than his artistic/pictorial work. He thereby made an important contribution to the re-evaluation of photography as an art form. His photograph “Noire et blanche” (1926) was auctioned by Christies in 1998 for a record sum of $550,000.

From 1897 Man Ray lived in New York. He took art evening classes, from 1911 worked as a map illustrator, and also began painting and sculpting. In 1921 he moved to Paris and met the Surrealists. Man Ray the photographer was self-taught. He earns money with reproductions and portraits of his artist friend.

By 1922 he had opened his own studio and was elevated to the role of official photographer of the avant-garde. From 1919, Man Ray experimented intensively with photographic techniques (Sandwich montage, double exposure, photo collage).

In 1921 he created his first photogram (“Rayographs” “Rayogrammes”) and exhibited his first photographs. He also met Alice Prin alias “Kiki”, who became his lover and muse and who posed for “Noire et blache” and “Le Violon d’Ingres”.

From 1922, Man Ray also worked as a fashion photographer for “Vogue”, and “Vanity Fair”, amongst others. He made photographic character studies of great cultural figures of the time, such as Joyce, Proust, Picasso, and Matisse. Berenice Abbot and Lee Miller studied photography under Ray’s tutelage, and in 1929, he began a relationship with Miller, with whom he explored the photographic technique of solarisation & In 1940 Man Ray emigrated to the USA, and thereafter gradually lost interest in photography.

His work was recognized and won awards in various exhibitions (including “Gold Medal for Photography” in the 1961 Venice Biennale, The DGPh cultural award in 1966). In 1946 he married Juliet Browner with whom he returned to Paris, where he lived from 1951 until his death on November 18th 1976. The epitaph on his gravestone reads “unconcerned, but not indifferent”.

Website:  www.manray.net

Man Ray Photography:-

Man Ray Photography

 

Man Ray Photography
Man Ray Photography
Josef Sudek (1896-1976)
 
Photographer Josef Sudek
Josef Sudek is regarded as one of the most legendary photographers from the 20th century and is best known for his compelling photographs. He was born in 1896 in the industrial town of Kolin on the River Labe in Bohemia. Czechoslavakia then existed only in the imagination of a few visionary artists, particularly writers, and of some political activists. Emperor Franz Josef reigned on the Hapsburg throne and Bohemia was a Kingdom in the Austro- Hungarian Empire.
Josef’s father was a house painter and he apprenticed his son to a bookbinder; a fellow worker introduced the young man to photography. In 1915 he was drafted and assigned to a unit on the Italian front. After slightly less than a year in the line, he was wounded in the right arm. The wound was not serious, but gangrene set in; a long struggle ensued and finally Sudek’s arm was removed at the shoulder.
Sudek’s photography is sometimes said to be modernist. But this is only true of a couple of years in the 1930s, during which he undertook commercial photography and thus worked “in the style of the times”. Primarily, his personal photography is neo-romantic & His early work included many series of light falling in the interior of St. Vitus cathederal.
During and after World War II Sudek created haunting night-scapes and panoramas of Prague, photographed the wooded landscape of Bohemia, and the window-glass that led to his garden (the famous The Window of My Atelier series). He went on to photograph the crowded interior of his studio (the Labyrinths series).
His first Western show was at George Eastman House in 1974 and he published 16 books during his life and Sudek’s individualism did not fit in with the new post-war Czech Socialist Republic, but fortunately the strong artistic tradition of the country meant that there were many mavericks in the establishment who supported his work, and it continued to be published.
Finally he was to become the first photographer to be honored by the Republic with the title of ‘Artist of Merit’ and in his 70th year, his life’s work was recognized by the ‘Order of Labor’. He was known as the “Poet of Prague”, Sudek never married, and was a shy, retiring person. He never appeared at his exhibit openings and few people appear in his photographs. Despite the privations of the war and Communism, he kept a renowned record collection of classical music.
He died, still keen to do more work, at the age of 80 in 1976.
Website: www.sudek-atelier.cz
Josef Sudek Photography:-
 
Josef Sudek Photography
 
Josef Sudek Photography
 
Josef Sudek Photography
 
Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908-2004)
 
Photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson
 
Henri Cartier-Bresson was born on August 22, 1908 in Chanteloup, France. A pioneer in photojournalism, Cartier-Bresson wandered around the world with his camera, becoming totally immersed in his current environment. Considered one of the major artists of the 20th century, he covered many of the world biggest events from the Spanish Civil War to the French uprisings in 1968.
Henri Cartier-Bresson is considered by many to be the father of modern photojournalism and arguably the greatest photographer of the twentieth century.  He was an early adopter of the 35mm format and will forever be associated with Leica – the German manufacturer whose cameras and lenses he used exclusively throughout the decades of his illustrious career.
As an undoubted master of street and reportage photography, his stunning vision and style of composition raised photojournalism to an art form.  His work has influenced generations of photographers throughout the world, and will surely continue to do so.
He studied painting and literature in the 1920s and was influenced by the visual aspects of Surrealism. He took up photography in the early 1930s and had his first exhibitions and publications by 1933. Visits to Mexico and the United States, and a job as an assistant to filmmaker Jean Renoir, helped develop his work, but it was World War II that launched his international career.
Imprisoned by the Germans in 1940, he escaped in 1943 and worked with the Resistance, while polishing his skills as a portrait photographer and chronicler of everyday life. He co-founded the photo agency Magnum Photos in 1947, and published his first book, Images a la sauvette, in 1952.
His book, released under the English title of The Decisive Moment, became a foundation of modern photojournalism, and Cartier-Bresson became internationally famous as a camera artist whose specialty was capturing significant moments of human interaction. Working exclusively in black and white, Cartier-Bresson captured the liberation of Paris in 1945, Gandhi just before his death in 1948, the Chinese revolution in 1949 and, over the years, dozens of portraits of artists, thinkers and politicians, including Albert Camus, Truman Capote, Che Guevara and Marilyn Monroe. In the mid-1970s he abandoned photography and returned to drawing and painting.
Website: www.henricartierbresson.org
 
Henri Cartier-Bresson Photography:-
 
Henri Cartier-Bresson Photography
 
Henri Cartier-Bresson Photography
 
 
Henri Cartier-Bresson Photography
 
 
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1 Comment
  • Robert Versteegen
    Posted at 18:53h, 26 January

    A wonderful collection of the best, there is a big difference between than an now, at these day’s in digital area the people are shooting pictures, in the old day’s they maked photographs. wonderful !!!