Brassai
Welcome to the Brassai section. Here, you may find and purchase Brassai posters for any taste.
Accurately selected Brassai posters decorate rooms, create cosiness and comfort. The most pleasant thing about posters is that you may choose any topic and color solution to your liking. Our Brassai gallery features posters of various color and topical solutions.
Naked Before the Camera - New Yorker |
Naked Before the CameraNew YorkerSuperb, artful examples by Brassaï, Brandt, Kertész, Weston, and Penn are seen alongside depictions of bodies in medical, anthropological, crime-scene, and motion-study photographs, as well as choice bits of erotica—from a vintage stereopticon view of ... |
Master of the Photobook: Robert Delpire's Long and Legendary Influence - TIME  TIME |
Master of the Photobook: Robert Delpire's Long and Legendary InfluenceTIMEThe first issue of Neuf (meaning both 'new' and 'nine') appeared in June 1950, and over the course of its run, would devote much of its content to photographic works by Brassaï, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Robert Doisneau, Izis (Israëlis Bidermanas), ...and more » |
Photographer for the people - The Register-Guard |
Photographer for the peopleThe Register-GuardIts lineage can be traced directly back to the work of photographers he most admires: Henri Cartier-Bresson, Brassaï, Walker Evans and Robert Frank. Frank, the Swiss-born photographer who created the landmark 1950s photobook “The Americans,” showed up ... |
Word and image: my top 10 books on film - The Guardian  The Guardian |
Word and image: my top 10 books on filmThe GuardianRoland Barthes once said he had decided to prefer photography to cinema, and he was in good company, with Philippe Sollers, Brassaï and Proust, among others. The argument, broadly, is that photography resists time by stopping it, even at the cost of ... |
Durer, Met Nudes of Patti Smith, Hermaphrodite: Review - BusinessWeek |
Durer, Met Nudes of Patti Smith, Hermaphrodite: ReviewBusinessWeekYet the most compelling 20th-century photographs here are by Brassai, Man Ray, Irving Penn and Edward Weston. In some of these masterworks, the human body suggests landscape, monument and abstract sculpture. These figures are no longer merely “naked” ...and more » |
Goings On About Town - New Yorker  New Yorker |
Goings On About TownNew YorkerSuperb, artful examples by Brassaï, Brandt, Kertész, Weston, and Penn are seen alongside depictions of bodies in medical, anthropological, crime-scene, and motion-study photographs, as well as choice bits of erotica—from a vintage stereopticon view of ...and more » |
to an age when life came from literature - The Australian |
to an age when life came from literatureThe AustralianHe has exchanges with photographer Brassai and Henry Miller. He attends a baseball doubleheader in New York with Beckett, whose failing eyes prevent him from following the ball but whose passion for cricket engenders a duty to remain in his seat. |
International Center of Photography opens exhibition of the work by Christer ... - Art Daily |
International Center of Photography opens exhibition of the work by Christer ...Art Daily“These intimate portraits and Brassaï-like lush night scenes form a magnificent, dark, and moving photo album, a vibrant tribute to these girls,” said ICP Curatorial Assistant Pauline Vermare, who organized the exhibition. These photographs were first ...Christer Strömholm - La Place BlancheLa Lettre de la Photographieall 2 news articles » |
Gallery review: Emma Wilcox, fighting photographer - Philadelphia Inquirer |
Gallery review: Emma Wilcox, fighting photographerPhiladelphia Inquirer... in the 1970s and '80s to raise awareness of the boroughs' decay; in the latter series, she's a contemporary Brassai, who like the great street-prowling Parisian photographer, seems magnetically drawn to the seedy beauty of her city's rougher edges. |
This Week: Must-See Arts in the City - WNYC (blog) |
This Week: Must-See Arts in the CityWNYC (blog)It shows: the photographer's stark black-and-white images (which recall the work of Brassaï) record moments of glamor, intimacy and heartbreak -- a revealing look at a group relegated to the fringes of French society. Opens Friday, in Midtown. |
XML error: not well-formed (invalid token) at line 11
|