Friday, December 2, 2016

Top 100 Photos of All Time

Image result for Untitled Film Still #21 by Cindy Sherman

Image result for Untitled Film Still #22, 1978

1. I chose this picture because I like how the subject posed. I like that the photograph is different because most pictures have smiling subjects, but this picture shows the subjects emotions. I also like the angle the photograph was taken and how the subject stands out from the background. The black and white colors brought my attention.
2. Cindy Sherman took this self-portrait in 1978 and approached it as a performance of art. By photographing herself in such roles from films and movies, Sherman embeds herself into a dialogue about oversimplified portrayals of women.
3. As mentioned above, Sherman used this self-portrait to change her identity. The photos she captured were always herself. However, she changed their appearance or identity.
4. Cindy Sherman is known for her "disguised" self-portraits. She was born January 19, 1954 in New Jersey. She graduated from the State University of New York, at Buffalo. She later began work on "Complete Untitled Film Stills."






1. I chose this photograph because I like the background. The background makes the subject the main focus and brings attention to the viewer. I thought the photograph was well positioned. What caught my attention was the colors and as I mentioned before, the background of the photograph.
2. In this photograph Nat Fein, the photographer, attended the New York Herald Tribune taking pictures of the game on the first-base line. He then got behind Ruth leaning on his bat. After Ruth passed away, Fein won the Pulitzer Prize for his picture.
3. Ruth, the famous baseball player. However, Babe Ruth was not playing for more than a decade and had cancer. When Ruth stood before the massive crowd, it was obvious that it was his "final public goodbye."
4. Nathaniel Fein was born on August 7, 1914 in Manhattan. and died on September 26, 2000. He was a photographer for the New York Herald Tribune for thirty-three years.


Image result for Invasion of Prague by Josef Koudelka



1. What caught my attention of the photo was the point of view it was photographed. It is unique and I love how it was in focus and how the hand was perfectly placed half. I also like how the buildings looked back then and the old cars.
2. The photo is part of an art gallery that show the Russian Invasion of Czechoslovakia. The photos show the struggles the people experienced during the Soviet invasion. When I saw this photograph I was shocked of how empty the street was. The invasion might be a factor of it.
3. The London Post publicized and published it under the name of "P.P for Prague Photographer" since Koudelka feared that if he were to insert his actual name, the government officials would capture him.
4. Josef Koudelka was born in Boskovice, Czech Republic on January 10, 1938. He was in the Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague.


Image result for Camelot by Hy Peskin
Image result for hy peskin photographs

1. I really like the point of view in which the photograph was taken. What really caught my attention was the way Kennedy looks at his girlfriend. It is such a great candid photo and how the wind slightly lifts Jacqueline's hair is just such a great pose. Both smiles make the photo more radiant.
2. Hy Peskin, the photographer, created a "behind the scenes" called "Senator Kennedy Goes A-Courting." Peskin photographed the politician Kennedy and his girlfriend Jacqueline over a summer weekend. According to Jackie, they just shoved her on the boat just to take the picture.
3. Peskin's photograph ended up in the front cover of the world's most widely read photo magazine. Later, he married Jacqueline.
4. Hy Peskin was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1915 to Russian immigrants. He spent his career shooting icons of history, covering sports and politics. He began his career at Ebbet's Field and soon became the most renowned photographer of his day.




1. What caught my attention was the city in the background. It looks like they are in a studio with a fake background. I was also shocked at how calm the men look while thousands of feet from the ground. I also like how the people are all in focus. The white/grey background makes the subjects stand out.
2. The passage stated that the photograph was staged as a campaign for the skyscraper complex. The photograph represented ambition during times of the depression.
3. Three photographers were present during this time. Therefore, the photographer who took this photo is not known. The construction of the building provided jobs for many people. The photograph is important because it acknowledges the mens' work on the construction of the building who probably did not get much money in return.
4 & 5. We don't know who the photographer is. However it was taken in 1932.











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