Blogs

Hugh Van Es, Photojournalist Who Covered Vietnam, Dies at 67


HONG KONG — Hubert Van Es, a Dutch photojournalist who covered the Vietnam War and took one of the best-known images of the American evacuation of Saigon in 1975 — people scaling a ladder to a helicopter on a rooftop — died here on Friday. He was 67. READ MORE HERE

SEBASTIÃO SALGADO Speaks at Hammer Museum May12th


Traveling constantly across Africa, Latin America, and Asia, Sebastião Salgado has documented the human toll of violence and migration in visually stunning photographs of manual laborers, refugees, and sprawling metropolises. The 2001 documentary Salgado: The Spectre of Hope chronicled the creation of his series of photographs, published as Migrations: Humanity in Transition. 

MORE INFORMATION HERE

New Works by Photography’s Old Masters


One of WWII's most famous photographers, is considered to be Robert Capa. His famous shot of a soldier being shot in mid-stride has become controversial, to say the least. Some new info on this and his other work at that time will come forth  with the discovery of 126 rolls of his and other photographers shot during the Spanish Civil War.

 

Red's Scarlet and Epic launch a new photo age


Call 2009 the year of convergence, the point at which each frame produced by a movie camera came to have more resolution than any photo in this magazine. Red Digital Cinema, started in 2006 by Oakley Eyewear founder Jim Jannard, is set to release two breakthrough digicams, the Scarlet and the Epic, later this year. The new devices will change the way everything from feature films to action sports to nature shows are shot. Read more here.

Paper Cuts


Paper Cuts tracks U.S. newspaper layoffs and buyouts. The total does not include jobs cut through attrition — a fancy way of saying open positions were eliminated. It does include all newspaper jobs, from editor to ad rep, reporter to marketing, copy editor to pressman, design to carrier, and anyone else who works for a newspaper.

View the site: here

AIG and US Airways Seek to Cover Up Flight 1549 Recovery Photos


Stephen Mallon might be sitting on some of the most newsworthy pictures never seen.

Stephen, a New York City industrial photographer, was hired by Weeks Marine, the maritime crane company involved in the recovery of US Airways Flight 1549 from the Hudson River, to document the recovery process.

Those who have seen the pictures say he did a wonderful job. He was given unlimited access on the water, to the plane's interior, virtually anywhere he wanted to go. He had the full cooperation and blessing of his immediate client, Weeks Marine; of the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB); and of USAirways. He never signed a Work for Hire agreement, and his client had no problem with him publishing the work non-commerically—like, on his website, where he posted them. The best shots from the more than 5,000 captures he made amounted to "an incredible, beautiful document of the recovery," according to Pulitzer-Prizewinning photo editor Stella Kramer, who saw them.

Read More and See the Photos here

 

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