Product Description
Book Description
A unique new history of contemporary photojournalism to mark the 50th anniversary of World Press Photo 'Things As They Are' tells the story of modern photojournalism, from The Family of Man and the heyday of Life magazine in 1955 to the era of the camera-phone in the present day. With 120 picture essays shown as they were first seen on the pages of newspapers and magazines, 'Things As They Are' reveals how the events of the world, the art of photographers, and the interests of the press have converged on the printed page. It traces how photojournalism has developed over time alongside changing technology, media, fashions in photography and a changing world.
Including landmark photo essays by photographers such as Richard Avedon, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Walker Evans, Nan Goldin, W Eugene Smith, Wolfgang Tillmans, Mary Ellen Mark, Sebastião Salgado and James Nachtwey, as shown on the pages of publications including Life, Paris Match, National Geographic, Stern, i-D and the Sunday Times, each is accompanied by an expert commentary. The book includes a introductory essay by Mary Panzer, a timeline of the last 50 years illustrated by the iconic winners of the annual World Press Photo awards, and an afterword essay by Christian Caujolle that looks to the future of photojournalism.
About the Author
Mary Panzer is a cultural historian who lives in New York. She worked as assistant director at the Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago, before becoming curator of photographs at the National Portrait Gallery, in Washington DC, between 1992 and 2000. Her books include Mary Ellen Mark (1997), Matthew Brady and the Image of History (1997), Philippe Halsman: A Retrospective (1998) and Lewis Hine (2002). Panzer also writes on art and history for publications including American Photo, Art in America, Art on Paper, Chicago Tribune and Vanity Fair, and is currently working on a historical survey of Look magazine.
Christian Caujolle was born in France in 1953. From 1978, he worked as photography critic for Libération before becoming its director of photography in 1981. He is currently director of the influential Paris-based photo agency and gallery, Vu, which he created in 1986. Caujolle has worked as artistic director of international photography festivals, including Les Rencontres dArles in 1997, Rotterdams Foto Biennale in 2000 and Madrids Photo España in 2001, and he has contributed as editor and writer to books of photographs by Michael Ackerman, Peter Beard, William Klein, Jacques Henri Lartigue, Gisèle Freund and Sebastião Salgado, among many others.
World Press Photo is an independent, non-profit organization, committed to supporting and promoting the work of professional press photographers internationally. Founded in Amsterdam in 1955 in Amsterdam, it organises the worlds largest and most prestigious annual press photography contest, exhibiting the results in over 35 countries each year and with its yearbook published in X languages. It also contributes to the training and support of photojournalists with its annual Joop Swart Masterclass and with its programmes of international seminars (for instance, in 2005, in Armenia, Indonesia, Nigeria and Tanzania).