french photographer
Photography
Started by
Don
, Jun 16 2005 09:51 PM
71 replies to this topic
#62
Posted 04 March 2012 - 06:47 AM
#64
Posted 20 March 2012 - 03:30 PM
i love him so much than when i posted his pictures i was near to create a thread only for this kind of photographers because of all the pictures i have... i mean, many thousands.
but i'm feel to lazy to upload one by one every photo. for the moment bellazon could only be proud to have one of the largest Diane Arbus' collections on internet (maybe the biggest... i never saw a collection as important as mine including on blogs, google gallery, tumblr, auction websites, books or exhibitions). that's enough.
Berenice Abbott (July 17, 1898 - December 9, 1991)
american photographer
Berenice Abbott (July 17, 1898 - December 9, 1991)
american photographer
#65
Posted 23 April 2012 - 04:01 AM
#66
Posted 16 June 2012 - 05:31 PM
#67
Posted 22 October 2012 - 01:00 AM
this is the website of a french photographer based in paris i know and really like. all his work is really amazing and i can't make a choice so here the whole thing :
http://www.williamdaniels.net/
http://www.williamdaniels.net/
#68
Posted 01 December 2012 - 12:08 AM
Remi Ochlik. he was amazing and very talentuous and won the award of world press photo fewdays before his death in february 2012 
http://www.ochlik.com/
http://www.ochlik.com/
#69
Posted 02 January 2013 - 10:04 PM
HI
I MA NEW MEMBER OF THIS FOURM . I AM SEEING THIS . IT IS GOOD .
I MA NEW MEMBER OF THIS FOURM . I AM SEEING THIS . IT IS GOOD .
#70
Posted 17 February 2013 - 11:22 PM
serie in the Shadow of Wounded Knee by Aaron Huey
01 May 2012
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, South Dakota, USA
"Oglala youths hold an upside-down flag, an international symbol of distress and an act of defiance toward the U.S. government, at a rally to commemorate the 1975 shoot-out between American Indian Movement (AIM) activists and FBI agents. Two agents and one AIM member died; AIM's Leonard Peltier was jailed for life.
On the Great Plains of the United States, hidden away on the little-traveled back roads of South Dakota, is American Prisoner of War Camp Number 344. It is now known as the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, and is the home of the Oglala Lakota. Pine Ridge is ground zero for native issues because of both the work of the American Indian Movement and because of the infamous Wounded Knee Massacre of 1890, where the US 7th Cavalry killed 300 Sioux and ended the Indian Wars. Pine Ridge has been one of the poorest places in the country for decades with an unemployment rate upwards of 90 percent and a male life expectancy of 48. But today there are also newly formed resistance movements on the reservation and the revival of traditional spiritual ways."
01 May 2012
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, South Dakota, USA
"Oglala youths hold an upside-down flag, an international symbol of distress and an act of defiance toward the U.S. government, at a rally to commemorate the 1975 shoot-out between American Indian Movement (AIM) activists and FBI agents. Two agents and one AIM member died; AIM's Leonard Peltier was jailed for life.
On the Great Plains of the United States, hidden away on the little-traveled back roads of South Dakota, is American Prisoner of War Camp Number 344. It is now known as the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, and is the home of the Oglala Lakota. Pine Ridge is ground zero for native issues because of both the work of the American Indian Movement and because of the infamous Wounded Knee Massacre of 1890, where the US 7th Cavalry killed 300 Sioux and ended the Indian Wars. Pine Ridge has been one of the poorest places in the country for decades with an unemployment rate upwards of 90 percent and a male life expectancy of 48. But today there are also newly formed resistance movements on the reservation and the revival of traditional spiritual ways."
#71
Posted 17 February 2013 - 11:39 PM
Oil on Water by Benjamin Lowy
27 April 2010
"Pools of crude oil float to the surface of the Gulf of Mexico at the site of the sunken Deepwater Horizon drill. In April, the Deepwater Horizon oil-drilling rig, in the Gulf of Mexico off the Louisiana coast, sunk after an explosion. Over the next four months, the resultant sea-floor oil gusher released an estimated 4.9 million barrels (nearly 780 million liters) of crude oil, making it the biggest marine oil spill in history and causing extensive damage to marine and wildlife habitats, as well as to tourism and fishing industries in the Gulf. The rig, operated by Transocean under contract for BP, was drilling in about 1,525 meters of water, pushing the boundaries of deepwater drilling. President Barack Obama placed an immediate moratorium on new drilling off the US coast"
27 April 2010
"Pools of crude oil float to the surface of the Gulf of Mexico at the site of the sunken Deepwater Horizon drill. In April, the Deepwater Horizon oil-drilling rig, in the Gulf of Mexico off the Louisiana coast, sunk after an explosion. Over the next four months, the resultant sea-floor oil gusher released an estimated 4.9 million barrels (nearly 780 million liters) of crude oil, making it the biggest marine oil spill in history and causing extensive damage to marine and wildlife habitats, as well as to tourism and fishing industries in the Gulf. The rig, operated by Transocean under contract for BP, was drilling in about 1,525 meters of water, pushing the boundaries of deepwater drilling. President Barack Obama placed an immediate moratorium on new drilling off the US coast"
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