@Badger@mastodon.sdf.org
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Badger

@Badger@mastodon.sdf.org

Taught film for most of my life. I'm a photographer and psychogeographer. I've directed theatre, sat at a Steenbeck and I read a lot. Still working on that damn novel. Any help would be gratefully received. Jungian by nature.

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Pete Seeger.

Croton-on-Hudson,
New York.
2001.

Annie Leibovitz.

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Boy Standing In Front Of Fallen Statue Of Lenin.

Dario Mitidieri.
1991.

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Lee Jeffries career began as a sports photographer, capturing football in Manchester. Then a chance meeting with a homeless woman living in the streets of London changed his life forever. He has since dedicated himself to capturing gripping portraits of the disenfranchised.

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Kosti Ruohomaa.

After died in 1961, his legacy as one of New England’s greatest photographers was all but forgotten.

The way the world viewed Maine at that time was partly influenced by what he showed them.

He found his Maine “hidden in the offbeat nooks and crannies.”

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Michael Joseph.

Lost & Found.
Those who travel the country by hitchhiking and freight train hopping. The freedom does not come without consequence.

Nott Joe, New Orleans, 2018.

Dice, New Orleans, 2014.

Selene, New Orleans, 2020.

Alister and Sherie, New Orleans, 2016.

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Raymond Depardon.

Glasgow.

1980s.

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Rebecca Lepkoff.

Like so many left-leaning New York photographers who came of age during the Great Depression, she soon found her classroom and home at the famed Photo League; a large group of like-minded members who believed in the power of the documentary photograph.

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Peter Henry Emerson.
1880s.

The soft tones, peaceful, agrarian scenes and absence of modern symbols would go on to inspire the Pictorialism movement, which rejected the cold scientific realism and posited photography as a way to express emotional intent.

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Imogen Cunninghan

My interest in photography has something to do with the aesthetic, and that there should be a little beauty in everything.

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Miriam Makeba.

In a recording studio in Johannesburg in 1955.

Jurgen Schadeberg.

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Gianni Berengo Gardin.

On a vaporetto.

Venice.
1958.

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Charles Ciccione.

Le Laitier.
1953

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Girl Reading a Letter in an Interior.

Peter Vilhelm Ilsted.

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W.Eugene Smith.

Tomoko Uemura Is Bathed by Her Mother.

Yoshiko Uemura gently bathes her sixteen-year-old daughter, Tomoko. Born in Minamata, Japan, Tomoko was one of thousands in the region who were severely disabled by industrial pollution.

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US hegemony.

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Don McCullin.

Homeless.

“There were many untold truths about this country, we had poverty, we had unemployment, we had a class system that wasn’t convenient.
When I started walking the streets of London and seeing people sleeping in shop doorways, even I was shocked.”

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William Klein.

Moscow in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

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Ida Wyman.

A member of the influential Photo League cooperative in New York, she believed that ‘photos could be used to effect change’. At a time when few women pursued a career in the industry, she worked on photo essays and film sets and was a regular contributor to Life.

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Roger Mayne.

Girls, Battersea Fun Fair.

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Francis Newton Souza.

The Politicians.

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Peter Mitchell began taking photographs of Leeds in the early 1970s.

“I was amazed by the great deserts springing up in south Leeds. It was so easy to demolish the back-to-back terraces. They just wrapped a chain around them and pulled.”

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Martine Franck.

"Martine Franck encourages us to take another look at the supposed banality of everyday life".

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Paul Auster in his study.
1993.

Arnold Newman.

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Mystery solved.

Vivian Maier was one of the greatest street photographers of all time.
In all the years I taught photography I always stressed the importance of narrative as well as the visual design elements needed to make an image sing.

Vivian was a genius storyteller.

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Frank Horvat.

Paris,
Gare Saint-Lazare.

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