马里恩 波斯特 沃尔科特[album id=1 template=extend]

FSA的著名摄影师。
从小和母亲生活在一起,在寄宿学校。参加过社会运动,反对纳粹。
想成为老师。后来遇到了她妹妹helen的摄影老师,并得到了鼓励。
后来战乱搬家,在纽约遇到了大牛 Ralph Steiner 和Paul Strand。Paul Strand给 Roy Stryker 写推荐信,所以,她开始了FSA的拍摄,“ladies’ stories”。
与某人结婚,开始幸福的妇女生活。不过,她用摄影支撑一家生活。
评论说,她的照片给FSA带了了清新的诚意。也许就是当年的小清新路线。

“As an FSA documentary photographer, I was committed to changing the attitudes of people by familiarizing America with the plight of the underprivileged, especially in rural America…  FSA photographs shocked and aroused public opinion to increase support for the New Deal policies and projects, and played an important part in the social revolution of the 30s” said Marion Post Wolcott.
作为FSA的纪实摄影师,我致力于改变对处于贫困境地的,人们所熟悉的美国看法,尤其是乡村美国。FSA的图片可以震惊和唤醒民意支持罗斯福的新政,并且是30年代社会改革中的重要组成部分。

said Marion Post Wolcott.
原谅我蹩脚的英语翻译吧。

Marion Post (later Marion Post Wolcott) (June 7, 1910 – November 24, 1990) was a noted photographer  who worked for the Farm Security Administration during the Great Depression documenting poverty and deprivation. She was born in New Jersey. Her parents split up and she was sent to boarding school, spending time at home with her mother in Greenwich Village when not at school. Here she met many artists and musicians and became interested in dance. She studied at The New School.

She trained as a teacher, and went to work in a small town in Massachusetts. Here she saw the reality of the Depression and the problems of the poor. When the school closed she went to Europe to study with her sister Helen. Helen was studying with Trude Fleischmann, a Viennese photographer. Marion showed Flieschmann some of her photographs and was told to stick to photography.
A juke joint located in Belle Glade, Florida. Photographed by Marion Post Wolcott in 1944.

While in Vienna she saw some of the Nazi attacks on the Jewish population and was horrified. Soon she and her sister had to return to America for safety. She went back to teaching but also continued her photography and became involved in the anti-fascist movement. At the New York Photo League she met Ralph Steiner and Paul Strand who encouraged her. When she found that the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin kept sending her to do “ladies’ stories,” Ralph Steiner took her portfolio to show Roy Stryker, head of the Farm Security Administration, and Paul Strand wrote a letter of recommendation. Stryker was impressed by her work and hired her immediately.

Her photographs for the FSA often explore the political aspects of poverty and deprivation. They also often find humour in the situations she encountered. Her work is some of the finest in the extensive archive.

In 1941 she met Lee Wolcott. When she had finished her assignments for the FSA she married him, and later had to fit in her photography around raising a family and a great deal of travelling and living overseas.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/library_of_congress/2179038448/in/set-72157603671370361/  flickr上收集的FSA 30年代的彩色照片

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marion_Post_Wolcott

http://people.virginia.edu/~ds8s/mpw/mpw-bio.html

http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/oralhistories/transcripts/wolcot65.htm  口述历史

个人网站

http://people.virginia.edu/~ds8s/mpw/p-fsa/family/family.html

http://people.virginia.edu/~ds8s/mpw/mpw-fsa1.html

摄影家20- 约翰 瓦尚

2010年03月21日 @ 18:35:07   暂无评论 »

John Vachon

约翰 瓦尚 ,取得文学学士之后,在斯特莱克办公室做档案管理工作和信差。闲暇期间拍照,受到ben shahn、Stryker的鼓励,开始拍专题。后来为FSA拍摄。估计,在 斯特莱克 去美孚石油公司之后,他也过去工作。
进入过生活杂志,也是LOOK专职摄影师。受埃文斯风格影响很大。埃文斯还影响了弗兰克。
具体见wiki 资料。

John F. Vachon (19 May 1914–20 April 1975) was an American photographer. He worked as a filing clerk for the Farm Security Administration before Roy Stryker recruited him to join a small group of photographers, including Esther Bubley, Marjory Collins, Mary Post Wolcott, Jack Delano, Arthur Rothstein, Walker Evans, Russell Lee, Gordon Parks, Charlotte Brooks, Carl Mydans, Dorothea Lange and Ben Shahn, who were employed to publicize the conditions of the rural poor in America.

Family and education

Vachon was born in Saint Paul, Minnesota. He graduated from Cretin High School (now Cretin-Derham Hall High School). He received a bachelors degree in 1934 from the University of St. Thomas in Saint Paul, then named St. Thomas College. In about 1938 he married Millicent Leeper who was known as Penny. She died in 1960. Vachon married Fraoise Fourestier in 1961. Vachon served in the United States Army in 1945.[1]

Vachon’s daughter, Christine Vachon, is a noted independent film producer.

Later years
African American boy. Cincinnati, Ohio, 1942 or 1943. Photographed by John Vachon.Doctor administering a typhoid vaccination at a school in San Augustine County, Texas. Photograph by John Vachon, April 1943.Worker at carbon black plant in Sunray, Texas. Photographed by John Vachon, 1942.

John Vachon’s first job at the Farm Security Administration carried the title “assistant messenger.” He was twenty-one, and had come to Washington from his native Minnesota to attend The Catholic University of America. Vachon had no intention of becoming a photographer when he took the position in 1936, but as his responsibilities increased for maintaining the FSA photographic file, his interest in photography grew.[2]

By 1937 Vachon had looked enough to want to make photographs himself, and with advice from Ben Shahn he tried out a Leica in and around Washington. His weekend photographs of “everything in the Potomac River valley” were clearly the work of a beginner, but Stryker lent him equipment and encouraged him to keep at it. Vachon received help as well from Walker Evans, who insisted that he master the view camera, and Arthur Rothstein, who took him along on a photographic assignment to the mountains of Virginia. In October and November 1938, Vachon traveled to Nebraska on his first extensive solo trip. He photographed agricultural programs on behalf of the FSA’s regional office and pursued an extra assignment from Stryker: the city of Omaha.[2]

The hallmark of this style of photography is the portrayal of people and places encountered on the street, unembellished by the beautifying contrivances used by calendar and public relations photographers.[2]

He was a photographer for the Office of War Information in Washington, D.C. from 1942 to 1943, and then staff photographer for Standard Oil Company of New Jersey between 1943 and 1944. Between 1945 and 1947 he photographed New Jersey and Venezuela for Standard, and Poland for the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration.[1]

Vachon became a staff photographer for Life magazine, where he worked between 1947 and 1949, and for over twenty five years beginning in 1947 at Look magazine. When Look closed in 1971 he became a freelance photographer. In 1975 he was a visiting lecturer at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.[1]

He died in 1975 in New York at age 60.[1]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Vachon

http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/fsahtml/fachap02.html

又是生活杂志的感觉。

19-卡尔 麦登斯

2010年03月14日 @ 11:51:36   暂无评论 »

Carl Mydans

Carl Mydans (May 20, 1907 – August 16, 2004) was an American photographer who worked for the Farm Security Administration and Life magazine.

Mydans became devoted to photography while in college at Boston University. While working on the Boston University News as an undergraduate, his first reporting jobs were for The Boston Globe and the Boston Herald. After college, he went to New York as a writer for American Banker and then in 1935 to Washington to join a group of photographers in the Farm Security Administration.

In 1936, he joined Life as one of its earliest staff photographers (Alfred Eisenstaedt, Margaret Bourke-White, Thomas McAvoy and Peter Stackpole were the original staff photographers) and a pioneering photojournalist.

Mydans recorded photographic images of life and death throughout Europe and Asia during World War II. In 1941, the photographer and his wife Shelley, herself a journalist, were captured by the invading Japanese forces in the Philippines, held for nearly a year in Manila, then for another year in Shanghai, China, before they were released as part of a prisoner-of-war exchange.

Mydans was sent back to war in Europe for pivotal battles in Italy and France. By 1944, Mydans was back in the Philippines to cover MacArthur’s landing, where he took some of his most famous pictures.

Some of Mydans’s more famous pictures include: the bombing of Chongqing, the Japanese surrender aboard the U.S.S. Missouri in 1945; angry French citizens shaving the heads of women accused of sleeping with Germans during the occupation in 1944; a roomful of excited royal youngsters and their staid older relatives in 1954; and a 1950 portrait of Douglas MacArthur smoking a pipe.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Mydans

一开始为FSA工作,后来为美国生活杂志工作,是最早的一批摄影家。去拍摄二战时,与妻子被日军抓捕,后来被交换时释放。拍摄过重庆轰炸。

更多资料,图片见http://library.duke.edu/exhibits/carlmydans/index.html

这是最著名的那张照片。

摄影家18-拉塞尔 李

2010年03月02日 @ 20:55:49   暂无评论 »

1

图片来源:

http://alkek.library.txstate.edu/swwc/wg/exhibits/rlee/index.asp

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russell_Lee_%28photographer%29

总结

2010年02月11日 @ 21:46:27   1 条评论 »

这个博客将近一年。我发现自己越来越不想写字,而且也写不出东西来。自己的生活琐事不愿意写,没啥写的,对于新闻时事,也没太多兴趣评论,主要是评论的没啥太多含义。尽管说,要发出自己的声音,但这种声音没有啥独特的,不如不写。

一直说总结,明天要去山东了。回来转眼就过年了。赶紧写。网络还断了,用蹭网卡。

几大爽事。

1.给win 7 举办party,得了一个正版光盘,卖了800元。

2.买了一支索尼录音笔,1400元。1TB硬盘,560元。雅西卡124G 1500元。哈苏,9000元。20寸的液晶(单位用)890元。

3.工作两次评选,名列前茅,奖金独占鳌头。不过不值一提,千元左右而已。

3.面孔终于告一段落,做了些专访。

4.认识了一些人。很感激。

5.出差了,和旧朋友重新联络起来。感谢生命本身,和缩短距离的交通工具,以及手机。

6.看了一些书。但7月之后,忽然再也不看书了。

PS,我发现自己的快乐很简单,花钱、得到钱,以及朋友们的一些赞赏。真的很简单。

2010年的计划。

1.新项目一定要坚持做下去。一定要找到合适的方式、方法,要进一步做踏实。时间不久了。

2.工作一定要努力。不张扬,且自信。

3.一定要多出差,一定和那些好朋友多联系。

4.一定坚持写日记,用多种形式记录生活本身。

5.没啥了。

PS,愿望很多,去做好了。就能看到不足和改进。

PPS,希望能出一本书。。。。

简单说,视野要在宽阔,心胸在宽广些,时间再抓紧些。

祝福我自己,祝福我的朋友们。希望,我需要你们的时候,你们都在。你们需要我的时候,大声说出来。不说那些虚情假意的祝福的话,没劲。

唯一注重内心,说真话,这日子才平淡且真实,且勇猛。