Photographer Unknown, (Orange)
Reblogged with many thanks to https://misterlemonzest.tumblr.com
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Photographer Unknown, (Directions: Forward and Down), Selfie
“I’ve always admired people who give accurate directions, and the tribe is small.”
―
Photographer Unknown, “Chico in the Meadow”
“The Meadow… Only one of them succeeded in making a life here… He weathered. Before a backdrop of natural beauty, he lived a life from which everything was taken but a place. He lived so close to the real world it almost let him in.”
–James Galvin, The Meadow
Paul Sixta, “Oscar”, Portraiture
Reblogged with thanks to the artist’s site: www.paulsixta.com
Please credit artist when reblogging.
Jeyson Paez, “Christian Williams”
Jeyson Paez is a portrait and fashion photographer based in Dallas/ Fort Worth, Texas.
“There are chance meetings with strangers that interest us from the first moment, before a word is spoken.”
― Fyodor Dostoyevsky,
Photographer Unknown, (Two)
Photographer Unknown, (On the Rock)
“Peter was not quite like other boys; but he was afraid at last. A tremour ran through him, like a shudder passing over the sea; but on the sea one shudder follows another till there are hundreds of them, and Peter felt just the one. Next moment he was standing erect on the rock again, with that smile on his face and a drum beating within him.”
–J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan
Born in Kirriemuir, located in the council area of Angus in May of 1860, James Matthew Barrie was a Scottish playwright and novelist. The ninth of ten children of a conservative Calvinist family, he was sent at the age of eight to the Glasgow Academy where he was put in the care of his siblings Alexander and Mary Ann, who taught at the school. Two years later, Barrie returned home and studied at the Forfar Academy and, later, at the Dumfries Academy.
James M. Barrie enrolled at the University of Edinburgh to study literature and graduated with an Masters of Arts in April of 1882. In the next decade, he wrote several short stories, which served as basis for his first novels. These were popular enough to establish Barrie as a successful writer. In 1891, Barrie wrote a successful theater play, “Ibsen’s Ghost or Tool Up-to-Date”, a parody of Henrik Ibsen’s dramas “Hedda Gabler” and “Ghosts”.
Barrie’s character of Peter Pan first appeared in his 1902 novel “The Little White Bird”, published in book form by Hodder & Stoughton and serialized in Scribner’s Magazine. His more famous and enduring theatrical work “Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn’t Grow Up” had its first stage performance on the 27th of December in 1904 at the West End’s Duke of York’s Theatre. The play introduced the character of Wendy and contrasted the social constraints of late Victorian and Edwardian middle class domestic reality with the moral ambivalence of Neverland.
In 1911, J. M. Barrie developed the “Peter Pan” play into the novel “Peter and Wendy”. Both versions tell the story of Peter Pan, a mischievous little boy who can fly and has many adventures on the island of Neverland that is inhabited by fairies, mermaids, Indians, and pirates. The stories also involve the Darling children Wendy, John and Michael, the fairy Tinker Bell, the Lost Boys, and the pirate Captain Hook. Barrie continued to revise the play for years after its debut; the final version was published in 1928.
Prior to the publication of Barrie’s “Peter and Wendy”, the play was adapted into a 1907 novelization entitled “The Peter Pan Picture Book” written by Daniel O”Connor and illustrated by Alice Woodward. The original 1911 novel contains a frontispiece and eleven half-tone plates by Francis Donkin Bedford. With Barrie’s permission, the novel was first abridged by May Byron in 1915 and published under the name “Peter Pan and Wendy”; this version was later illustrated by Mabel Lucie Attwell in 1921. Barrie gave the copyright to the Peter Pan works in April of 1929 to the Great Ormond Street Hospital, a leading children’s hospital in London.
Disney was a long-time licensee to the animation rights, and cooperated with the hospital when its copyright claim was clear. After following the directive to harmonize copyright laws within the European Union in 1995, the copyright was extended to the end of 2007. The original versions of the play and novel are now in the public domain in most of the world including all countries where the term of copyright is eighty-five years or less after the death of the creators. In spite of the expiration of the copyright, a 1988 United Kingdom statutory provision grants royalties, regarding any public performance, commercial publication, and communication to the public of any substantial part of the play or adaptation of it, in perpetuity to the Great Osmond Street Hospital.
Photographer Unknown, (Puffs of Smoke)
Wing Shya, Title Unknown, (Many Words Tell the Story)
Born in Hong Kong 1964, Wing Shya returned to Hong Kong following his fine art studies at Emily Carr Institute in Canada and founded the award-winning design studio, Shya-la-la Workshop. In 1997, appointed as the exclusive photographer and graphic designer; Shya began his collaboration with the renowned movie director, Wong Kar-Wai on “Happy Together”, continued then on In the “Mood for Love”, “Eros” and “2046”. He has shot images of some of the region’s top talent and collaborated with fashion houses, brands and magazines.
Pierre Debusschere, “Vinnie”
Pierre Debusschere is a visual artist working in the fields of photography and video. He has shot editorials for several leading magazines such as ‘Vogue’, ‘Homme Japan’ and ‘Citizen K’, as well as being a regular contributor to ‘Dazed & Confused’. His work has been exhibited throughout Europe including a presentation at Colette in Paris during fashion week where he creatively interpreted the collections, producing an original fashion film based on a runway collection each day.
His website: http://www.pierredebusschere.com
Photographer Unknown, (Facing the Backdrop)
Photography by Duane Michals
Duane Michals is one of the great photographic innovators of the last century, widely known for his work with series, multiple exposures, and text.
Michals first made significant, creative strides in the field of photography during the 1960s. In an era heavily influenced by photojournalism, Michals manipulated the medium to communicate narratives. The sequences, for which he is widely known, appropriate cinema’s frame-by-frame format. Michals has also incorporated text as a key component in his works. Rather than serving a didactic or explanatory function, his handwritten text adds another dimension to the images’ meaning and gives voice to Michals’s singular musings, which are poetic, tragic, and humorous, often all at once.
Over the past five decades, Michals’s work has been exhibited in the United States and abroad. The Museum of Modern Art, New York, hosted Michals’s first solo exhibition (1970). More recently, he has had one-person shows at the Odakyu Museum, Tokyo (1999), and at the International Center of Photography, New York (2005). In 2008, Michals celebrated his 50th anniversary as a photographer with a retrospective exhibition at the Thessaloniki Museum of Photography, Greece and the Scavi Scaligeri in Verona, Italy.
Photographer Unknown, (Sam Morris: Summer Heat)
Images reblogged with many thanks to the artist: http://thestarvingartiste.tumblr.com
Photographer Unknown, (The Television Never Told Me)