Wednesday 5 October 2011

karen work Thomas hoepker

Thomas hoepker was born in 1936 in Germany. Hoepker studied art history and archaeology in Munich – Germany until 1959.In 1960 he worked as a photographer for Münchner Illustrierte and Kristall up until 1963, his role was reporting from all over the world.
In 1964 he joined stern magazine as a photo – reporter and it wasn’t long until they started distributing his photographs. in 1964 Hoepker worked as art director for Stern in Hamburg between 1987 and 1989, when he became a full member of Magnum. Specializing in reportage and stylish color features. He then received the prestigious Kulturpreis of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Photographie in 1968.
Among many other awards for his work, he received one in 1999 from the German Ministry of Foreign Aid for Death in a Cornfield, a TV film on Guatemala. Today Hoepker lives in New York. He shoots and produces TV documentaries together with his second wife Christine Kruchen. He was president of Magnum Photos from 2003 to 2006.
his most famous/controversial picture was the picture taken on september 11th 2001 where the picture still to this day is banned, only by himself though, the reasons for this is because the way the people in the background are the way there sat makes it look

Wednesday 14 September 2011

Photo journalism part 1

The man who took this picture was named Henri Cattier Bresson. this picture was taken at a train station in 1933 and still to this day is known as one of the most amazing photo's of the century. it is told as the perfect desisve moment and some people speak of it as a story, at the time there was wars happening all over europe and then there is a man jumping into the unknown so some people said that the man jumping reminded them of europe. He also was the founder of street photography and spent most of his life taking pictures and writing journals. he was known as the godfather of photography. the camera that was used was called Leica and when it was released there wasnt many of them you had to have money to have one and fortunatly he did. the one he used for a majority of his life was a one lens 50mm.