Sunday, December 14, 2014

The images that changed photography

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It's amazing to realize how much has changed the picture in the last 20 or 30 years, but this trend was not always so fast. The early days of the eighth art, iconic images today, were public figures, Queens or inhospitable scenes of everyday life â€" a hippopotamus at the London Zoo.

Many of these photos belong to the archives of the Royal Photographic Society, at the Science Museum in Kensington (United Kingdom) and recently saw the light of day and be exposed to the public soon.

Many of them have already been published in the British press, and is this first sample of exposure that you bring here. See the photos and, below, the corresponding caption. The exhibition "Drawn by Light" derives from 2 December and until March 1, 2015.

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1. Queen Victoria of England photographed by Roger Fenton in 1856. 

2. Hippo photographed at London zoo, by Juan Carlos Maria Isidro, in 1852

3. Afghan girl photographed by Steve McCurry in 1984 â€" one of the best-known pictures ever

4. advertising Image commissioned by the u.s. Government to Nickolas Muray in 1940.

5. Christina, photographed by Colonel Mervyn O'Gorman in 1913.

6. Leicester Square, London, photographed in 1896 by Paul Martin.

7. In 1858, Henry Peach Robinson photographed a young dying â€" an image that caused great controversy

8. A photo of John Hinde of 1944, used in a propaganda war.

9. another picture of Hinde, also of 1944 and also about the war.

10. Audrey Hepburn photographed in 1950 by Angus McBean.

11. Charis Wilson photographed by Edward Weston, in 1936, in Ocean Beach, California (USA)

12. A Sepervivum Percarneum photographed in 1922 by Albert Renger-Patzsch.

13. Photo of John Linde, without any reference to a year.

14. the village of Hernandez, New Mexico, photographed in 1941 by Ansel Adams.

15. a chimney photographed in 1934 by Noel Griggs.

16.Imagem of Oscar Rejlander, 1857.

17.Fotografia of Calum Colvin of 1986.



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