Andy Grundberg was the photography critic of the New York Times from 1981 to 1991. He later served as the director of the Ansel Adams Center for Photography in San Francisco and as chair of the ...
Robert Frank, "New York City, 7 Bleecker Street" (1993), gelatin silver print, 15 15/16 x 19 13/16 inches (∼40.48 x 50.32 cm); Museum of Modern Art (all images courtesy Museum of Modern Art, New York) ...
During the colonial period, the camera became something of an imperial device, as Western images defined narratives about the history, culture, and identity of the African continent. Now, in its first ...
Andy Grundberg is uniquely positioned to tell the story of photography’s meteoric rise from the art world’s margins to its vital center, and to describe it from both an eyewitness perspective and one ...
A group of experts met to discuss the images that have best captured — and changed — the world since 1955. Credit... Supported by By M.H. MillerBrendan EmbserEmmanuel Iduma and Lucy McKeon Let’s get ...
Artistic styles exist only in retrospect. While many of their defining characteristics are formulated in manifestos by pioneering artists, a style can’t be fully understood until it has become a thing ...
This streetlight mystic shows her painterly photography at MoMA in an archive that celebrates long exposures and perceptual improvisation. By Holland Cotter The stellar photographer Ming Smith ...
The Photography area is a creative and innovative environment, inspiring students to become technically and conceptually proficient, visually literate and culturally engaged artists. The program ...
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe. The Museum of Art & Photography ...
From a Brussels private collection, we present an ensemble of fine art, spanning almost the entire 20th Century, ranging from a Jef Lambeaux Selfportrait over a series of drawings by Armand Simon, ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results