Picturing Toronto (McGill-Queen's/Beaverbrook Canadian Foundation Studies in Art History)
by Sarah Bassnett
In 1911, when Arthur Goss was hired as Toronto's first official photographer, the city was at a critical juncture. Industry expansion and population growth produced pressing concerns about housing shortages, sanitation, and the health and welfare of citizens. Dispelling popular misconceptions, Picturing Toronto demonstrates that Goss and other photographers did not simply document the changing conditions of urban life - their photography contributed to the development of modern Toronto and shape...
The Great War the War to End All Wars which began 100 years ago, cost 15 million lives, and shaped the modern world. New technologies such as tanks, aircraft, submarines and chemical warfare wrought unimaginable horror throughout Europe, upon combatants and civilians alike, for four years. Comprised of more than a thousand photographs, maps, battle plans and contemporaneous news reports, this book tells the complete story of this devastating war."
Portland and Newboro Ontario in Colour Photos (Cruising Ontario, #160)
by Barbara Raue
This book offers an analysis of the socio-historical conditions of the rise of postwar Italian photography, considers its practices, and outlines its destiny. Antonella Russo provides an incisive examination of Neorealist photography, delineates its periodization, traces its instances and its progressive popularization and subsequent co-optation that occurred with the advent of the industrialization of photographic magazines. This volume examines the ethno(photo)graphic missions of Ernesto De M...
Colonialism and Photography in the Era of the Great War
The millions of images that were taken pose important questions: How were colonial soldiers framed and photographed in wartime Europe, and Europeans in wartime colonies; and what languages did the 'eye' draw upon while capturing these men? These photographs - even when taken by Europeans - also break the silence around the colonial soldiers, who were often non-literate and did not leave behind many written records. Including a substantial introduction, a critical theoretical foreword from one...
Photographing, Exploring and Exhibiting Russian Turkestan (Routledge History of Photography)
by Inessa Kouteinikova
This book illuminates the crucial role photography played from the very beginning of the Russian colonial presence in Central Asia and its entanglement with the orientalist legacy that followed. Inessa Kouteinikova examines these under-studied materials while also addressing the photographic market and reception of photography in the Russian Empire, the position of the popular press, the place of public exhibitions and emergence of the first ethnographic museums that took pace from Moscow to T...
New Orleans Then and Now (Then & Now (Thunder Bay Press))
by Lester Sullivan
Photographs of Texas' frontier past are valuable as both art and artifact. Recording not only the lives and surroundings of days gone by, but also the artistry of those who captured the people and their times on camera, the rare images in Lens on the Texas Frontier offer a documentary record that is usually available to only a few dedicated collectors. In this book, prominent collector Lawrence T. Jones III showcases some of the most interesting and historically important glimpses of Texas histo...
Town of Lincoln Ontario in Colour Photos (Cruising Ontario, #195)
by Barbara Raue
Lucknow and Mitchell Ontario and Area in Colour Photos (Cruising Ontario Continued, #110)
by Barbara Raue
100 Camera Projects for Fun and Profit
by John Durniak and Harvey Shaman
St. George Book 2 and Bethel, Oakland and Scotland in Colour Photos (Cruising Ontario, #181)
by Barbara Raue
American photographers have been fascinated by the lives of California farmworkers since the time of the daguerreotype. From the earliest Gold Rush–era images and the documentary photographs taken during the Great Depression to digital images today, photographers and farmworkers in California have had a complicated and continuously changing bond. In Everyone Had Cameras, Richard Steven Street provides a comprehensive history of the significant presence of California farmworkers in the visual cul...
Pacific Legacy offers an unprecedented record of the relics of World War II that have survived on the islands of the Pacific: American landing craft rusting on the reefs where they were stopped by enemy fire; shell-pocked Japanese fortifications; fallen aircraft overgrown by jungle; packed-coral landing strips still as good as new. These evocative colour images are paired with archival photographs that show the same tropical battlegrounds as they appeared in wartime.The text covers the entire wa...
Painting with Fire shows how experiments with chemicals known to change visibly over the course of time transformed British pictorial arts of the long eighteenth century--and how they can alter our conceptions of photography today. As early as the 1670s, experimental philosophers at the early Royal Society of London had studied the visual effects of dynamic combustibles. By the 1770s, chemical volatility became central to the ambitious paintings of Sir Joshua Reynolds, premier portraitist and fi...
Orillia Ontario in Colour Photos (Cruising Ontario, #97)
by Barbara Raue