William Heick, Ira H. Latour, C. Cameron Macauley: The Golden Decade
By (Author) Ken Ball
Steidl Publishers
Steidl Verlag
1st February 2017
Germany
General
Non Fiction
Individual photographers
779.0922
Hardback
368
Width 292mm, Height 292mm
3100g
After World War II the California School of Fine Arts (CSFA) in San Francisco hired renowned photographer Ansel Adams to establish one of the first fine art photography departments in the United States. The caliber of teachers and guest instructors assembled there under the new directorship of Douglas McAgy was unmatched, and the school was one of the most avant-garde art schools of its time. On hand were photographers Adams and Minor White, along with Edward Weston, Dorothea Lange, Imogen Cunningham, Lisette Model, Nancy and Beaumont Newhall, and Homer Page. Three former students of Adams and White - William Heick, Ira H. Latour and C. Cameron Macauley, later known as the "Three Musketeers" - began planning a book that would focus on CSFA's photography department, covering the years between 1945 and 1955, the period known as "The Golden Decade." It was a lucky coincidence when Ken Ball and his wife Victoria Whyte Ball (whose father, Don Whyte, had bequeathed them an abundance of negatives and contact prints from his student years at CSFA) joined them. Together this team has embarked on an important journey into photography's past that is embodied in this book.
...resolutely avant-garde...--Sara Taglioretti "Wallpaper*"
A new book charts the astonishingly rich work made at the California School of Fine Arts in the middle of the 20th century, pushing the boundaries of documentary, landscape and portrait photography... Mentored by the likes of Ansel Adams, Dorothea Lange and Edward Weston, photography students at the California School of Fine Arts explored everything from abstraction to documentary...-- "The Guardian"
Ansel Adams headed up the photography department and Mark Rothko gave lectures. A new tome from Steidl takes us inside the San Francisco college responsible for pioneering art school culture as we know it-- "Another Magazine"
You'll find perfection after perfection, amazed at the quality of the overlooked work.--Dave Barton "OC Weekly"