Google翻訳
"Twenty Five Postcards", a photo book by William Eggleston, one of America's leading photographers. Under the influence of Henri Cartier-Bresson, Egleston began photography in the 1960s. Initially I shot in black and white, but in 1966 I switched to color photography. The color photograph was first seen by John Szarkowski, the curator of MoMA's photography department, and he held a solo exhibition in 1976. This has broadened the artistic recognition of color photography, and Egleston is still a very popular photographer as the protagonist of the photographic movement called "New Color". This book is from fotofolio's "Twenty Five Postcards" series, which contains a total of 25 prominent works by prominent photographers, published by Richard Avedon, Bruce Weber, and even Wolfgang Tillmans. One. It is also recommended for framed items as if it were printed.