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Great book, I'm fortunate enough to have a copy.3) Too many, but I'd probably go for Early Colour by Saul Leiter.
Great book, I'm fortunate enough to have a copy.3) Too many, but I'd probably go for Early Colour by Saul Leiter.
I'm sorry, that doesn't compute3) I have too many photo books already![]()
Don't you think that is quite restrictive? Do you mean the specific works in the books you purchase, or one or some of the work by that photographer? Especially since much of that work may not be readily viewable in galleries or museums that are within one's neighborhood or on one's travels.The REASON I DON"T OWN MORE PHOTO BOOKS is that I have nearly never bought one before I saw original prints. That applied to Weston and Avedon, for example.
My only AA book: I helped him load hundreds of pounds of hypo in bags into his his International Harvester Travel All (an excellent 4X4 ancestral SUV). We'd just received a stack of his books where I worked (Adolph Gasser's industrial/professional warehouse). I grabbed an Artificial Light and he signed it for me.
Don't you think that is quite restrictive? Do you mean the specific works in the books you purchase, or one or some of the work by that photographer? Especially since much of that work may not be readily viewable in galleries or museums that are within one's neighborhood or on one's travels.
You are lucky to be close to the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson. They hold many important collections there, I'm sure the exhibitions are stellar.You're probably usually right for people who can't experience "readily viewable in galleries or museums." But in America, most of us do live within a day's long drive to major cities,
Since entry into graduate school (1965) I've always lived within a couple of hours of San Francisco, and my most rewarding travels have been to New York City. Some people do of course reside incredibly far from galleries and museums, so they're less likely than they might like to see fine original prints by distant photographers.
I've missed a lot by not residing near Tokyo, for example, but I've seen incredibly fine prints in Tucson Arizona, a four or five day commitment from my home in Albuquerque New Mexico, Albuquerque itself exhibits fine prints because we have a couple of fine galleries (mostly attractive to younger photographers)...and we have a sometimes excellent University gallery. As well, we have Tamarind Institute which shows photo work that's important globally ( but doesn't exhibit the usual Photrio photos).
You are lucky to be close to the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson. They hold many important collections there, I'm sure the exhibitions are stellar.
That made me think of Weston's photos in Leaves of Grass. The reproduction is horrible in that book. I have since seen some of them in other books and they are quite nice. I'm glad that one wasn't my first Weston book.The REASON I DON"T OWN MORE PHOTO BOOKS is that I have nearly never bought one before I saw original prints. That applied to Weston and Avedon, for example.
My only AA book: I helped him load hundreds of pounds of hypo in bags into his his International Harvester Travel All (an excellent 4X4 ancestral SUV). We'd just received a stack of his books where I worked (Adolph Gasser's industrial/professional warehouse). I grabbed an Artificial Light and he signed it for me.
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