Alex Benjamin
Subscriber
Title is self-explanatory.
For now (more will surely be added):
- Tod Papageorge: had Passing through Eden in my hand once in a used bookstore. Had other stuff to buy so passed on it. I regret it now. Papageorge's writings are brilliant and insightful: Tod Papageorge on Robert Adams
- Louis Draper: one of the founders of the Kamoinge Workshop. More info is available now than before through the Draper Archives, but I wish more could be found in book form.
- David Goldblatt: found Intersections at the Strand Bookstore in NYC a couple of weeks ago, so getting to know him better. Makes a nice trio of South African photographers with the books I already have by Ernest Cole (such a tragic life!) and Guy Tillim. As far as African photographers are concerned, the Kenyan Priya Ramrakha is also on my "getting to know better" list.
- Any photographer from India: too much stuff from tourists, foreign photojournalists—that damn prize-winning shot of human misery—or endless National Geographic clones. Would love to see more of India through the eyes of Indian photographers. Suggestions?
- Susan Meiselas: a recent discovery. The art of looking with compassion.
How about you?
For now (more will surely be added):
- Tod Papageorge: had Passing through Eden in my hand once in a used bookstore. Had other stuff to buy so passed on it. I regret it now. Papageorge's writings are brilliant and insightful: Tod Papageorge on Robert Adams
- Louis Draper: one of the founders of the Kamoinge Workshop. More info is available now than before through the Draper Archives, but I wish more could be found in book form.
- David Goldblatt: found Intersections at the Strand Bookstore in NYC a couple of weeks ago, so getting to know him better. Makes a nice trio of South African photographers with the books I already have by Ernest Cole (such a tragic life!) and Guy Tillim. As far as African photographers are concerned, the Kenyan Priya Ramrakha is also on my "getting to know better" list.
- Any photographer from India: too much stuff from tourists, foreign photojournalists—that damn prize-winning shot of human misery—or endless National Geographic clones. Would love to see more of India through the eyes of Indian photographers. Suggestions?
- Susan Meiselas: a recent discovery. The art of looking with compassion.
How about you?