A history of women photographers
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
A history of women photographers
Abbeville Press, 2010
3rd ed
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Note
Previous ed.: 2000
Includes bibliographical references (p. 385-418) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Women have had a special relationship with the camera since the advent of photographic technology in the mid-nineteenth century. Photographers celebrated women as their subjects, from intimate family portraits and fashion spreads to artistic photography and nude studies, including Man Ray's Violon d'Ingres.
Featuring more than 300 illustrations, A History of Women Photographers is the only comprehensive survey of women photographers from the age of the daguerreotype to the present day. In this edition, author Naomi Rosenblum expands the book's coverage to include additional photographers and fourteen new images. The text and the appendix of photographer biographies have been revised throughout, and Rosenblum also provides a new afterword, in which she evaluates the influence of rapidly changing digital technology on the field of photography and the standing of women photographers in the twenty-first century.
Table of Contents
Contents Introduction - Why Women?
Chapter 1 - At the Beginning, 1839-90
Chapter 2 - Not Just for Fun: Women Become Professionals, 1880-1915
Chapter 3 - Portraiture, 1890-1915
Chapter 4 - Art and Recreation: Pleasures of the Amateur, 1890-1920
Chapter 5 - Photography Between the Wars: Europe, 1920-40
Chapter 6 - Photography Between the Wars: North America, 1920-40
Chapter 7 - Photography as Information, 1940-2000
Chapter 8 - The Feminist Vision, 1970-95
Chapter 9 - Photography as Art, 1940-2000
AFTERWORD
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
NOTES
Biographies Jain Kelly
Selected Bibliography Peter E. Palmquist
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"