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1voteJulia Margaret Cameron, a renowned female photographer of the nineteenth century, took portraits of almost everyone she knew, from famous literary figures to family members and servants. Cameron made use of props, costumes, and carefully chosen settings to create fanciful images of the people who posed for her.
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1voteThis Web site accompanies the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s exhibition of Julia Margaret Cameron’s portraits of women. The curator’s note discusses how, by placing her subjects in inventive settings, the photographer created stylistically unique images. Her fascinating combination of melancholy and whimsy recalls certain themes in Whalen’s portraits and pinhole photographs.
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1voteA National Public Radio report on one of Diane Arbus's famous images--of a pair of young female identical twins. The site includes a download of the radio report and a written commentary.
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1voteThis issue of The Digital Journalist includes an essay on Mark by Marianne Fulton as well as a number of images and audio clips of an interview with the artist.
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1voteMary Whalen cites Mary Ellen Mark as an influence.
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1voteThe agency Bill Charles Represents provides access to a wealth of images by photographers associated with the firm, including Mathew Pokoik's teachers Stephen Shore and Larry Fink. The photographs range from advertising campaigns and fashion portraits to photojournalism.
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1voteThe Afterimage Gallery in Dallas, Texas reprints a short statement by photographer Stephen Shore, one of Mathew Pokoik's teachers, detailing his artistic process and his philosophy of photographic practice.
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