The work of 20th century street photographer Garry Winogrand takes center stage at a current retrospective at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. The artist captured scenes of urban and ...
There is a moment during Bill Moyers 1982 interview with Garry Winogrand when Winogrand, wandering through the streets of Los Angeles, lifts his camera to set up a shot. It’s a move he surely performs ...
One of my favorite photographs has always been a Garry Winogrand from 1964. It captures a couple in a convertible driving somewhere in Los Angeles. She is staring straight ahead, lips pressed together ...
Portrait of Garry Winogrand, by Judy Teller (all images courtesy Film Forum) In the opening scenes of the film Garry Winogrand: All Things are Photographable, one can hear Winogrand’s thickset, ...
The great photographer Garry Winogrand took more than a million pictures during his career. Among his preferred subjects was people at airports, especially those saddled with luggage. “When we talk ...
American photographer Garry Winogrand saw photographs where others saw random space. He helped create a revolution in photography that ended up almost consuming his posthumous reputation. He was not ...
A documentary about an artist or photographer should feel like an adventure, one that burrows into the boldness of its subject. (There are exceptions, of course, but in general, if the subject isn’t ...
Los Angeles, 1964 © Estate of Garry Winogrand, Courtesy of Fraenkel Gallery John F. Kennedy, Democratic National Convention, Los Angeles, 1960 © Estate of Garry ...
Garry Winogrand remains a larger than life figure in the world of photography. His chaotic images of jostling crowds and perturbed passersby reveal, in the best of his work, the chaotic intimacy of ...
Winogrand was known for going out strapped with two cameras, one for black-and-white and one for color. But, until recently, most of what we’ve seen of his work has been strictly black-and-white. “New ...
American photographer Garry Winogrand saw photographs where others saw random space. He helped create a revolution in photography that ended up almost consuming his posthumous reputation. He was not ...
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