Omaha Sketchbook Edition:UnsignedIn this new edition of Omaha Sketchbook, Gregory Halpern returns to his lyrical yet equivocal account of the American heartland. Compiled over fifteen years of photographing Omaha, Nebraska, the book forms a prescient meditation on America, the men and boys who inhabit it, and the mechanics of aggression, inadequacy, and power. In loosely collaged spreads that reproduce his construction paper sketchbooks, Halpern takes pleasure in dissonance and
I liked them a lot because they seemed otherworldly and therefore completely vulnerable in a society in which they did not belong and for which they were not prepared
Despite Hemingway’s seniority of 15 years
giving back prints to the subjects and ensuring that the photographs are shown locally before being launched on an International stage
The Sound of Two Songs
His work stands today as some of the most influential war photography ever produced
Captioned by the 0600hrs forecast on the day they were taken
After quitting LIFE magazine in 1954
and Killip’s groundbreaking photobook on the devastating impact of deindustrialization
Hoepker persuaded his editor that the story was bigger and followed Ali to Chicago where this photograph was taken
The moon hangs luminous in the dusk sky above sculpted desert cliffs
Freed particularly focused upon the comparatively freewheeling youth in the West – perhaps the best-known of those images being this
Generation Covid