Berenice Abbott /
Author / Creator: | Morel, Gaëlle. |
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Imprint: | Paris : Éditions Hazan ; New Haven [Conn.] : Distributed by Yale University Press, c2012. |
Description: | 223 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/8786140 |
Summary: | An exemplary study of the career of photographer Berenice Abbott that reveals the astonishing range of her artistic, documentary, and scientific production Abbott left the United States in 1921 to study sculpture in Paris, where she was hired by Man Ray in 1923 to be his assistant. She took to photography immediately and by 1926 had set up her own studio. She became famous for her photographs showing bohemian artistic and intellectual life in the city, but in 1929 she returned to the United States and set up a new studio. Her best-known and most influential work, Changing New York , represented both a vast exercise in recording the architecture and urban life of New York and an intensely personal artistic project. Her straightforward method of photography led to her being employed full-time in the 1950s by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Boston to produce pictures illustrating the laws of physics. Distributed for Editions Hazan, Paris
Jeu de Paume, Paris (02/20/12-04/29/12) Ryerson Image Centre (05/23/12-08/19/12) |
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Item Description: | Translated from the French. |
Physical Description: | 223 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. |
Bibliography: | Includes bibliographical references. |
ISBN: | 9780300182002 0300182007 |