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Photography --- documentary photography --- Jackson, William Henry --- anno 1800-1899 --- Mexico
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Photography, Artistic --- Jackson, William Henry, --- West (U.S.) --- Pictorial works.
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Landscape photography --- Photographers --- History --- Biography --- Jackson, William Henry,
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Louis Riel prophesied that a polyglot Métis nation would rise on the prairies five hundred years after his death, and that it would be called the House of Charlemagne. Tim Lilburn tracks the birth of this ideal nation in the burning imagination of the young settler William Henry Jackson, who took the name Honoré Jaxon after his encounter with Riel's thought. Created as a text for dancers, the poem gives voice and body to a visionary metaphysics. "The brilliant collaborations at the heart of this book testify to the persistence of loyalty, belief, poetry, community, and the land itself. The colonial agenda of erasure is refuted by the music of shared creation. Even when the text is lost, the dance continues."-Warren Cariou, author of Lake of the Prairies "The fevered beauty of The House of Charlemagne's exquisite forms plunges us into a prophetic vision which circles our past to thread it through our future."- The Rt. Hon. Adrienne Clarkson, 26th Governor General of Canada
Métis --- Canadian poetry --- Riel, Louis, --- Jackson, William Henry,
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The final decades of the nineteenth century and the birth of the twentieth in America are illustrated as never before in this book of unique color images that actually predate the invention of color photography. The secret process which produced them combines the delicacy of watercolors with the look and feel of modern color photographs. The pictures are largely the work of the legendary William Henry Jackson, the pioneer photographer who explored the frontiers of the old American west with huge wet-plate cameras and a portable darktent strapped to the back of his trusty mule. Jackson's name is synonymous with high adventure, and Jim Hughes' richly detailed introduction tells a gripping story. Jackson was born in 1843 in New York, and by the 1860s he was on his first trip west, working as a bullwhacker on a wagon train when the nation's unfinished rail lines would take him no further. Finally, on the edge of the western frontier, he began photographing the wild and often spectacular ly beautiful landscape of a wilderness soon to be forced into submission by the advancing railroads. Over the next three decades Jackson became the most celebrated of a small and hardy band of pioneer photographers, creating a striking photographic record of the rapidly changing face of America. When his photographs of Yellowstone were credited with helping to persuade Congress to make the region the first National Park, his place in history was secure. From the Rockies to California, from the Great Lakes to the deep South, from teeming New York City to forested New Hampshire these photographs capture both urban and rural landscapes to provide a unique picture of the social and physical evolution of the United States. The book is arranged as a visual tour of the country, and is written with fascinating insights into America's places and politics at the turn of the century. In 1897 Jackson sold the bulk of his enormous archive of photographs to the Detroit Photographic Company, which he ^joined as a partner. The firm had recently licensed Photochrom, a secret Swiss process for turning black-and-white photographs into color. Completely distinct from today's four-color reproduction, Photochrom is a continuous-tone color rendition of a black-and-white photograph that uses multiple impressions from lithographic stones. The color produced was astonishingly naturalistic, and it was to this process that Jackson devoted his final years of active photography. Gone now was the mule, as he traveled North America in a specially equipped railroad car in search of images to tell the story of the closing of one epoch and the dawning of another. William Henry Jackson died in 1942 after a lifetime that spanned almost the entire history of photography. In recent years, thousands of never distributed Photochrom prints were discovered in a Montana warehouse. This book offers an ample selection of the finest, all published for the first time.
Jackson, William Henry --- Detroit Photographic Co --- United States --- Pictorial works. --- Photography --- United States
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"Boner has re-photographed William Henry Jackson's images from the 1871 Hayden Survey, the first government-funded expedition to explore the region that is today Yellowstone National Park and represents the first complete, published collection of Jackson's official photographs from the survey with contemporary comparisons"--Provided by publisher.
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impressionisme --- landschappen --- natuur --- Terra Foundation for American Art --- Terra, Daniel J. --- Terra, Judith F. --- Gifford, Sanford Robinson --- Jackson, William Henry --- Whistler, James Abbott McNeill --- Inness, George --- Robinson, Theodore --- Chase, William Merritt --- Kent, Rockwell --- 1860 - 1910 --- 19de eeuw --- 20ste eeuw --- Frankrijk --- Giverny --- Verenigde Staten
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fotografie --- fotografietheorie --- Verenigde Staten --- twintigste eeuw --- landschap --- landschapsfotografie --- documentaire fotografie --- New Topographics --- Adams Robert --- Gohlke Frank --- Baltz Lewis --- O'Sullivan Timothy H. --- Deal Joe --- Schort John --- Shore Stephen --- Stackpole Peter --- Smithson Robert --- Jackson William Henry --- Adams Ansel --- Becher Bernd & Hilla --- Ruscha Ed --- Graham Dan --- Wessel Henry --- Black James Wallace --- Nixon Nicholas --- Garnett William --- Lawrence George --- Antonioni Michelangelo --- Godard Jean-Luc --- Kepes Gyorgy --- Alajalov Constantin --- Orloff Deborah --- Burtynsky Edward --- Hanson David T. --- 77.047 --- Landscape photography --- New topographics (Photography) --- Hanson David T --- O'Sullivan Timothy H
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Ed. by Robert Doty ; Introd. by Minor White --- fotografie --- Verenigde Staten --- negentiende eeuw --- twintigste eeuw --- Southworth Albert Sands --- Hawes Josiah Johnson --- Brady Mathew B. --- Wood & Gibson --- Barnard George N. --- O'Sullivan Timothy H. --- Jackson William Henry --- Watkins Carleton --- Peck Henry S. --- Muybridge Eadweard --- Eakins Thomas --- Vroman Adam Clark --- Matthews Kate --- Currier Charles H. --- Genthe Arnold --- Riis Jacob --- Hine Lewis W. --- Stieglitz Alfred --- Käsebier Gertrude --- Keiley Joseph T. --- Day F.Holland --- White Clarence --- Steichen Edward --- Coburn Alvin Langdon --- Weston Edward --- Strand Paul --- Sheeler Charles --- Bruguiere Francis --- Ray Man --- Steiner Ralph --- Cunningham Imogen --- Adams Ansel --- Evans Walker --- Shahn Ben --- Lee Russell --- Morris Wright --- Lange Dorothea --- Morgan Barbara --- Siegel Arthur --- Weegee --- Eisenstaedt Alfred --- Smith W. Eugene --- Newman Arnold --- DeCarava Roy --- White Minor --- Bullock Wynn --- Sommer Frederick --- Callahan Harry --- Caponigro Paul --- Siskind Aaron --- Chappell Walter --- Labrot Syl --- Brown Dean --- Porter Eliot --- Stock Dennis --- Samaras Lucas --- Heinecken Robert --- Frank Robert --- Avedon Richard --- Davidson Bruce --- Riger Robert --- Uelsmann Jerry --- Meatyard Ralph Eugene --- Krause george --- Heath David --- Tice George --- Roodman Carl --- Kalisher Simpson --- Harbutt Charles --- Lyons Nathan --- Weston Brett --- Lyon Danny --- Hartmann Erich --- Rice Leland --- Michals Duane --- Arbus diane --- Welpott Jack --- Dater Judy --- Cohen mark --- Gowin Emmet --- Hall Douglas Kent --- Krims Leslie R. --- Worth Don --- Walker Todd --- 77.03 --- Photography --- History --- Brady Mathew B --- Barnard George N --- O'Sullivan Timothy H --- Peck Henry S --- Currier Charles H --- Hine Lewis W --- Keiley Joseph T --- Krims Leslie R
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