Vladimir Tretchikoff
Vladimir Tretchikoff’s popular prints won him the nickname "the king of kitsch." Tretchikoff's most famous work, The Chinese Girl—a portrait of a woman in Chinese dress notable for the bluish hue to her skin—sold more than half a million copies and was believed to be one of the best-selling prints of all time.
William Garnett
Photographer William Garnett pioneered the sweeping aerial photographs of sand dunes, swamps, and the rich geometry of plowed fields.
Sandra Blow
Collage artist Sandra Blow was one of the leaders of the postwar British abstract movement. Blow was known for large canvases that experimented with abstract form, light, space, texture, and rhythm.
Gary Winogrand
"When I’m photographing, I see life. That’s what I deal with. I don’t have pictures in my head. I frame in terms of what I want to include, and naturally, when I want to snap the shutter. And I don’t worry about how the picture’s gonna look - I let that take care of itself. We know too much about how pictures look and should look, and how do you get around making those pictures again and again. It’s one modus operandi. To frame in terms of what you want to have in the picture, not about how - making a nice picture. That, anybody can do." Gary Winogrand
Dorothea Lange
"You put your camera around your neck along with putting on your shoes, and there it is, an appendage of the body that shares your life with you. The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a
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