Start Over Please hold this item Remove from Book Cart MARC Display Return To Browse View/Export Marked Records Clear Saved Records
 
     
Limit search to available items
Record: Previous Record Next Record
Title The Compassionate Eye: Horace Bristol, Photojournalist [electronic resource] / by David Rabinovitch
Publication Info New York, NY : Filmakers Library, 2007.



Descript 1 online resource (52 min.)
005145
Note Horace Bristol shot some of the most significant photographs of the 20th century, compelling images that have become icons of our past. He captured emotional moments, set against a backdrop of history in the making. Horace was among the first contributors to Life magazine, photographing migrant labor camps in a series that became the basis for The Grapes of Wrath. He circled the globe in World War II with Edward Steichen's Navy photography unit. He spent the postwar decade documenting the changing way of life in Japan and Asia, covering Emperor Hirohito, General MacArthur, Chiang Kai-Shek, Prince Sihanouk, and the wars in Korea. China, and Vietnam. His photographs countered the numerous stereotypes of Asian culture perpetrated at the time. Bristol's photographs were lost for forty years after he destroyed every print he could find in a terrible act of self-recrimination when his wife committed suicide in 1955. Incredibly, three footlockers containing over 3,000 of his negatives were discovered in 1995. Rock superstar Graham Nash, a photographer and collector himself, initiated the restoration of Bristol's life's work. At an advanced age, Bristol was recognized as one of the most important photographers of the 20th century, with work in major museums throughout North America.
In English.
Click on the terms below to find similar items in the catalogue
Subject Bristol, Horace
Art & Design -- Art & Architecture -- Modern
Art & Design -- Art & Architecture -- Contemporary
Fine arts
Journalism
Alt author Rabinovitch, David Director.
Rabinovitch, David Producer.
Descript 1 online resource (52 min.)
005145
Note Horace Bristol shot some of the most significant photographs of the 20th century, compelling images that have become icons of our past. He captured emotional moments, set against a backdrop of history in the making. Horace was among the first contributors to Life magazine, photographing migrant labor camps in a series that became the basis for The Grapes of Wrath. He circled the globe in World War II with Edward Steichen's Navy photography unit. He spent the postwar decade documenting the changing way of life in Japan and Asia, covering Emperor Hirohito, General MacArthur, Chiang Kai-Shek, Prince Sihanouk, and the wars in Korea. China, and Vietnam. His photographs countered the numerous stereotypes of Asian culture perpetrated at the time. Bristol's photographs were lost for forty years after he destroyed every print he could find in a terrible act of self-recrimination when his wife committed suicide in 1955. Incredibly, three footlockers containing over 3,000 of his negatives were discovered in 1995. Rock superstar Graham Nash, a photographer and collector himself, initiated the restoration of Bristol's life's work. At an advanced age, Bristol was recognized as one of the most important photographers of the 20th century, with work in major museums throughout North America.
In English.
Subject Bristol, Horace
Art & Design -- Art & Architecture -- Modern
Art & Design -- Art & Architecture -- Contemporary
Fine arts
Journalism
Alt author Rabinovitch, David Director.
Rabinovitch, David Producer.

Subject Bristol, Horace
Art & Design -- Art & Architecture -- Modern
Art & Design -- Art & Architecture -- Contemporary
Fine arts
Journalism
Descript 1 online resource (52 min.)
005145
Note Horace Bristol shot some of the most significant photographs of the 20th century, compelling images that have become icons of our past. He captured emotional moments, set against a backdrop of history in the making. Horace was among the first contributors to Life magazine, photographing migrant labor camps in a series that became the basis for The Grapes of Wrath. He circled the globe in World War II with Edward Steichen's Navy photography unit. He spent the postwar decade documenting the changing way of life in Japan and Asia, covering Emperor Hirohito, General MacArthur, Chiang Kai-Shek, Prince Sihanouk, and the wars in Korea. China, and Vietnam. His photographs countered the numerous stereotypes of Asian culture perpetrated at the time. Bristol's photographs were lost for forty years after he destroyed every print he could find in a terrible act of self-recrimination when his wife committed suicide in 1955. Incredibly, three footlockers containing over 3,000 of his negatives were discovered in 1995. Rock superstar Graham Nash, a photographer and collector himself, initiated the restoration of Bristol's life's work. At an advanced age, Bristol was recognized as one of the most important photographers of the 20th century, with work in major museums throughout North America.
In English.
Alt author Rabinovitch, David Director.
Rabinovitch, David Producer.

Links and services for this item: