Google翻訳
"Morals of Vision", a photograph collection by William Eggleston, one of America's leading photographers. Eggleston began photography in the 1960s under the influence of Henri Cartier-Bresson. Initially I was shooting in black and white, but in 1966 I switched to color photography. The color photograph was first seen by MoMA's photography curator John Sharkawski, and he held a solo exhibition in 1976. As a result, the artistic recognition of color photography has expanded, and Eggleston is still a very popular photographer as the protagonist of the "new color" photographic movement. This book is the second book following "Election Eve", which is a book from a series reprinted by Steidl of the limited artist book that Eggleston published in the latter half of the 1970s (3 The first volume is "Flowers"). There are 9 illustrations (8 originals) of casual faces such as landscapes and interiors.