"Photograph" Essays and Research Papers

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    Kevin Carter

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    Anna Bińczyk Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph made by Kevin Carter in 1993 I decided to describe the story behind this photograph‚ because of two reasons. The first one is a book I am reading now: ‘The Bang - Bang Club’. Kevin Carter - the author of this photograph belonged to this four-member club of South African photographers. The second reason is that this is an important moment in documentary photograhy. This photograph was taken during the Sudan Famine in 1993. The picture depicts a hunger

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    Supporting Life: Earth’s Surface and Landforms The Lesson Activities will help you meet these educational goals: Science Inquiry—You will conduct online research related to a series of photographs‚ develop hypotheses‚ and communicate your findings in written form. STEM—You will analyze real-world data to gain insight into careers in Earth Science and Geology. 21st Century Skills—You will employ online tools for research and analysis‚ use critical thinking and problem-solving skills‚ communicate

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    Big Foot Observation

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    camera only functions during the day. It does not utilize sensors‚ instead the user sets the camera to capture one photograph every five‚ ten‚ or twenty seconds. I was anticipating that the lack of electronic emissions would allow me to obtain a clear picture of a Bigfoot. Unfortunately‚ the Bigfoot could detect even this type of camera‚ fortunately‚ I was still able to capture a photograph of a

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    ffre dew e

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    also places them in their historical contexts and on some occasions suggests the irony of the situations the two women faced. · NO photographs exist of the women in the prison camps but a wide variety of other images appear on screen as a background to the dialogue. These include: - Photographs taken of male P.O.Ws when they were liberated - Photographs of nurses arriving in Sing and song and instrumental music. · Music is a strong presence in the play adding variety and emotional subtext

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    different nationalities‚ and worked entirely independently of one another. In 1826 the Frenchman Joseph Nicephore Neipce created the first permanent picture that would be called a photograph. Another Frenchman‚ Louis Jacques Mande Daguerre‚ developed the daguerreotype in 1839‚ which produced the first photograph with true clarity. At this same time the British inventor‚ William Henry Fox Talbot‚ used paper negatives to make paper pictures called the calotype. These pictures were soft and blurry

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    concentrating on Jean Shrimpton and Leslie Hornby (Twiggy) helped to change the style of fashion and photography at this time. The essay will discuss the intimacy in the photographs of Jean Shrimpton by David Bailey and how their relationship‚ very much in the public eye‚ helped to create intrigue around the photographs and made them celebrities. It will also discuss the wider themes of the decade‚ such as the effect ‘Youthquake’ had on the designs of the 60s and the change in photography because

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    everyone. His decisive moments transformed the faces of photography. Illuminate photography’s potential to all of us.Photo-journalism was born in chaos of modern warfare.Should you trust a photograph? “trusting a photograph was probably a huge mistake from the beginning". However‚ people believe photographs. The Leica was a revolutionary development in camera technology launched in Germany in 1925‚  it was a compact‚ quiet with the latest lens and technology it gave birth to a whole new style

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    Lewis Hines

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    Island in New York and had the students photograph the immigrants who entered every day. During this period 1904-1909 he took over 200 photographs and came to realize his true calling in life. Lewis Hines pursued his dream in 1906 and started working as a staff photographer for the Russell Sage Foundation. He traveled to Pittsburgh‚ Pennsylvania and photographed life in the steel industry for the Pittsburgh Survey‚ a sociological study. He published his photographs in 1907‚ accompanied by text as an

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    Korda

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    world’s most famous Cuban photographer for his photography‚ documenting history of the revolution with over 55‚000 revolutionary themed photographs. Korda was born in Havana Cuba in 1928. He taught himself about photography with his father’s camera‚ leading to capturing some of the world’s most famous photographs known today. Korda’s career began shooting photographs at weddings and baptisms‚ and selling his photo’s as souvenirs at the event after he developed them. In 1953 Korda opened up his own

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    Helen Levitt

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    purchased a Leica camera and began to photograph the city. Helen Levitt’s photographs were not meant to tell a story. She took pictures in poor neighborhoods because the people in the street were fully sociable and visually interesting. Levitt’s photos did not consist of bizarre events. Most of them show the games and excitement of children‚ the everyday conversations of the working class‚ and the observant waiting of elders. What is extraordinary about the photographs is that these events that were

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