photorat
Registered Abuser
This is a call for RFF users to post their own personal list of "20 must-have photography books". Books may span all possible genres: photo books (portraits, landscapes, photojournalism, etc.), practical guides, studies in history/philosophy/aesthetics of photography, etc. The idea is to provide a nucleus for others looking to start or extend their own collections. (I'll post my own list in a seperate post.)
For the sake of uniformity, a couple of guidelines for posting:
a. Post a maximum of 20 books per list. If you want to split up the list into sub-lists per category (e.g. best practical guides, best portrait collections, best retrospectives, etc.) then limit each sub-list to 10 entries.
b. Format should be as follows:
Author surname, Author first name. Title. Location: Publisher, Year.
Publishing details are not essential but helpful for finding out-of-print items. e.g.:
1. Cartier-Bresson, Henri. Images à la sauvette. Paris: Verve, 1952.
c. By all means add comments in brackets after each entry, justifying its inclusion in the list, describing its particular importance to you personally... whatever.
For the sake of uniformity, a couple of guidelines for posting:
a. Post a maximum of 20 books per list. If you want to split up the list into sub-lists per category (e.g. best practical guides, best portrait collections, best retrospectives, etc.) then limit each sub-list to 10 entries.
b. Format should be as follows:
Author surname, Author first name. Title. Location: Publisher, Year.
Publishing details are not essential but helpful for finding out-of-print items. e.g.:
1. Cartier-Bresson, Henri. Images à la sauvette. Paris: Verve, 1952.
c. By all means add comments in brackets after each entry, justifying its inclusion in the list, describing its particular importance to you personally... whatever.
DavidH
Overweight and over here
Salgado, Sebastiao. "Africa". Taschen 2007
(Buy it, read it, compare own photography, sell cameras, take up golf.
Everyone has their favorites and opinions...as per other thread ongoing...but mine would be that HCB and Capa et al pale in comparison to this work.)
(Buy it, read it, compare own photography, sell cameras, take up golf.
Everyone has their favorites and opinions...as per other thread ongoing...but mine would be that HCB and Capa et al pale in comparison to this work.)
Rafael
Mandlerian
Here, in no particular order, are ten books that come to my mind (great idea for a thread by the way):
Nachtwey, James. Inferno.
Webb, Alex. Crossings.
Salgado, Sebastiao. Workers.
Lindbergh, Peter. Images of Women.
Boot, Chris (ed.). Magnum Stories.
Mora, Gilles, and John T Hill (eds.). W. Eugene Smith: The Camera as Conscience.
Borcoman, James (ed.). Magicians of Light: Photographs from the Collection of the National Gallery of Canada.
Penn, Irving. Worlds in a Small Room.
Eisenstaedt, Alfred, and Arthur Goldsmith. The Eye of Eisenstaedt.
Cameron, Julia Margaret and Julian Cox (commentary). In Focus: Julia Margaret Cameron: Photographs from the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Nachtwey, James. Inferno.
Webb, Alex. Crossings.
Salgado, Sebastiao. Workers.
Lindbergh, Peter. Images of Women.
Boot, Chris (ed.). Magnum Stories.
Mora, Gilles, and John T Hill (eds.). W. Eugene Smith: The Camera as Conscience.
Borcoman, James (ed.). Magicians of Light: Photographs from the Collection of the National Gallery of Canada.
Penn, Irving. Worlds in a Small Room.
Eisenstaedt, Alfred, and Arthur Goldsmith. The Eye of Eisenstaedt.
Cameron, Julia Margaret and Julian Cox (commentary). In Focus: Julia Margaret Cameron: Photographs from the J. Paul Getty Museum.
rxmd
May contain traces of nut
Here's some theory:
- Benjamin, Walter, The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction ("Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner technischen Reproduzierbarkeit"). The 1936 German original was published as a little book. I'm not sure if this was ever published in book form in English; an on-line version of the text is available here.
- Bourdieu, Pierre, Photography: A Middle-Brow Art, Stanford: Stanford University Press 1990 ("Un Art moyen")
- Sontag, Susan, On Photography, New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux 1977
And if you want photography in its wider context, the most brilliant theoretical introduction of all would probably be
- McLuhan, Marshall, Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man; the original was I think published in 1964; the best edition is probably Corde Madera, CA: Gingko Press 2003.
Philipp
- Benjamin, Walter, The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction ("Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner technischen Reproduzierbarkeit"). The 1936 German original was published as a little book. I'm not sure if this was ever published in book form in English; an on-line version of the text is available here.
- Bourdieu, Pierre, Photography: A Middle-Brow Art, Stanford: Stanford University Press 1990 ("Un Art moyen")
- Sontag, Susan, On Photography, New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux 1977
And if you want photography in its wider context, the most brilliant theoretical introduction of all would probably be
- McLuhan, Marshall, Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man; the original was I think published in 1964; the best edition is probably Corde Madera, CA: Gingko Press 2003.
Philipp
Roger Hicks
Veteran
Haist, if you want to understand the technical theory.
Google 'Grant Haist' for the details.
Cheers,
R.
Google 'Grant Haist' for the details.
Cheers,
R.
Dogman
Veteran
My list grows as time goes by. If I'm limited to 20, here's 20 of many (no particular order, just going by memory):
The Americans by Robert Frank
Walker Evans At Work
Deus ex Machina by Ralph Gibson
Personal Exposures by Elliott Erwitt
Andre' Kertesz: His Life and Work
Doisneau Paris
Ralph Eugene Meatyard, An American Visionary (published by the Akron Art Museum)
Henri Cartier-Bresson: Photographer
Emmet Gowin: Photographs
Friedlander by Peter Galassi
Paul Strand: Sixty Years of Photographs
The Daybooks of Edward Weston
Immediate Family by Sally Mann
William Eggleston's Guide
Georgia O'Keefe: A Portrait by Alfred Stieglitz
Josef Sudek: Poet of Prague
Winogrand: Figments of the Real World by John Szarkowski
Diane Arbus: An Aperture Monograph
Prague, 1968 by Josef Koudelka
Stray Dog by Daido Moriyama
(I had to delete a couple because I went over the limit.)
The Americans by Robert Frank
Walker Evans At Work
Deus ex Machina by Ralph Gibson
Personal Exposures by Elliott Erwitt
Andre' Kertesz: His Life and Work
Doisneau Paris
Ralph Eugene Meatyard, An American Visionary (published by the Akron Art Museum)
Henri Cartier-Bresson: Photographer
Emmet Gowin: Photographs
Friedlander by Peter Galassi
Paul Strand: Sixty Years of Photographs
The Daybooks of Edward Weston
Immediate Family by Sally Mann
William Eggleston's Guide
Georgia O'Keefe: A Portrait by Alfred Stieglitz
Josef Sudek: Poet of Prague
Winogrand: Figments of the Real World by John Szarkowski
Diane Arbus: An Aperture Monograph
Prague, 1968 by Josef Koudelka
Stray Dog by Daido Moriyama
(I had to delete a couple because I went over the limit.)
rxmd
May contain traces of nut
OK, Fred, here's one for you:
Leni van Dinther, Drukwerk, Nijmegen: Impuls Boek 1998.
Probably not one of the 10 greatest photo books of all time, but a nice counterweight.
Philipp
Leni van Dinther, Drukwerk, Nijmegen: Impuls Boek 1998.
Probably not one of the 10 greatest photo books of all time, but a nice counterweight.
Philipp
Disaster_Area
Gadget Monger
Probably one of the most inspirational books I've read in a long time, and very appropriate to this forum is :
The Tao of Photography: Seeing Beyond Seeing
by Philippe Gross
Made me really think about how and why I take pictures.
The Tao of Photography: Seeing Beyond Seeing
by Philippe Gross
Made me really think about how and why I take pictures.
RayPA
Ignore It (It'll go away)
Dogman said:My list grows as time goes by. If I'm limited to 20, here's 20 of many (no particular order, just going by memory):
The Americans by Robert Frank
Walker Evans At Work
Deus ex Machina by Ralph Gibson
Personal Exposures by Elliott Erwitt
Andre' Kertesz: His Life and Work
Doisneau Paris
Ralph Eugene Meatyard, An American Visionary (published by the Akron Art Museum)
Henri Cartier-Bresson: Photographer
Emmet Gowin: Photographs
Friedlander by Peter Galassi
Paul Strand: Sixty Years of Photographs
The Daybooks of Edward Weston
Immediate Family by Sally Mann
William Eggleston's Guide
Georgia O'Keefe: A Portrait by Alfred Stieglitz
Josef Sudek: Poet of Prague
Winogrand: Figments of the Real World by John Szarkowski
Diane Arbus: An Aperture Monograph
Prague, 1968 by Josef Koudelka
Stray Dog by Daido Moriyama
(I had to delete a couple because I went over the limit.)
This /\ is a good list. I would probably pull two or three off this and maybe add an Avedon, Araki, Bill Owens' Suburbia, M.E. Mark's Exposure and change the Evans' to Hungry Eye, but this is a list I can get behind. I love Stray Dog.
.
Nikonwebmaster said:OK my list right off my shelf (what I actually spent my money on)
1) Cindy Sherman's "Movie Stills"
One of the silliest books I've ever seen. Definitely NOT on my list.
.
Brennotdan
Established
My current favorite:
Sultan, Larry. Pictures from Home. New York. Harry N Abrams (October
1992)
/\ Difficult to find, but worth the look (not the price of a used copy though!)
I also second The Tao of Photography
Sultan, Larry. Pictures from Home. New York. Harry N Abrams (October
1992)
/\ Difficult to find, but worth the look (not the price of a used copy though!)
I also second The Tao of Photography
wintoid
Back to film
The family of man, and even more so, the family of children. Without these, I wouldn't be taking pictures.
ClaremontPhoto
Jon Claremont
Magnum Stories
and
Magnum Landscape
and
Magnum Landscape
J. Borger
Well-known
I thought i would add just one name .... a photographer getting very little attention on this forum ........ strange because he is one of the greatest streetphotographers ever ...!
Tom Wood: Photie Man
Steidl Verlag
ISNB 978-3865210838
Have a look....
http://www.steidlville.com/books/52-Photie-Man.html
His book "Bus odyssey" is also very good but hard to find and expensive by now!
Tom Wood: Photie Man
Steidl Verlag
ISNB 978-3865210838
Have a look....
http://www.steidlville.com/books/52-Photie-Man.html
His book "Bus odyssey" is also very good but hard to find and expensive by now!
crawdiddy
qu'est-ce que c'est?
I would add:
Avedon, Richard In the American West Portraits of the working class, and various drifters, carnys, mental patients, etc., made over a period of a couple of years.
Avedon, Richard In the American West Portraits of the working class, and various drifters, carnys, mental patients, etc., made over a period of a couple of years.
robster180
Established
here are a few of mine minus a fair few suggestions made by several of you already
Mountain Light: In Search of the Dynamic Landscape by Galen Rowell
Steam, Steel and Stars: America's Last Steam Railroad by O.Winston Link
Harm's Way by Joel Peter Witkin
Mountain Light: In Search of the Dynamic Landscape by Galen Rowell
Steam, Steel and Stars: America's Last Steam Railroad by O.Winston Link
Harm's Way by Joel Peter Witkin
ClaremontPhoto
Jon Claremont
Anybody anywhere near London should head for the Photographers' Gallery (near Leicester Square tube).
When I lived in London I had a membership which meant tickets to previews and chats with great photographers.
Wine, olives, talk to the photographer whose exhibition is featured this month...
When I lived in London I had a membership which meant tickets to previews and chats with great photographers.
Wine, olives, talk to the photographer whose exhibition is featured this month...
petronius
Veteran
My personal must haves - a subjective list:
1)
Andre Kertesz
„Momente eines Lebens“
2)
Ernst Haas
„The Creation“
3)
Evans/Agee
„Let us now praise famous men“
4)
Diane Arbus
„The aperture monograph“
5)
Peter Keetmann
„Eine Woche im Volkswagenwerk“
6)
Robert Frank
„The Americans“
7)
Phaidon 55
„Joel Meyerowitz“
8)
David Douglas Duncan
„Picasso paints a portrait“
9)
Josef Sudek
„Poet of Prague“
10)
John Loengard
„Celebrating the negative“
11)
Inge Morath/Arthur Miller
„Country Life“
12)
Ralph Gibson
„Deus ex machina“
13)
Richard Avedon
„In the American West“
14)
Walker Evans
„America“
15)
Lee Friedlander
„Maria“
16)
Jerome Liebling
„The people, yes!“
17)
Robert Mapplethorpe
„Flowers“
18)
Friedrich Seidenstücker
„Der faszinierende Augenblick“
19)
Andreas Feininger
„Stone and man“
20)
Gabriele und Helmut Nothhelfer
„Lange Augenblicke“
1)
Andre Kertesz
„Momente eines Lebens“
2)
Ernst Haas
„The Creation“
3)
Evans/Agee
„Let us now praise famous men“
4)
Diane Arbus
„The aperture monograph“
5)
Peter Keetmann
„Eine Woche im Volkswagenwerk“
6)
Robert Frank
„The Americans“
7)
Phaidon 55
„Joel Meyerowitz“
8)
David Douglas Duncan
„Picasso paints a portrait“
9)
Josef Sudek
„Poet of Prague“
10)
John Loengard
„Celebrating the negative“
11)
Inge Morath/Arthur Miller
„Country Life“
12)
Ralph Gibson
„Deus ex machina“
13)
Richard Avedon
„In the American West“
14)
Walker Evans
„America“
15)
Lee Friedlander
„Maria“
16)
Jerome Liebling
„The people, yes!“
17)
Robert Mapplethorpe
„Flowers“
18)
Friedrich Seidenstücker
„Der faszinierende Augenblick“
19)
Andreas Feininger
„Stone and man“
20)
Gabriele und Helmut Nothhelfer
„Lange Augenblicke“
pesphoto
Veteran
Harry Callahan: The Photographer at Work
http://www.amazon.com/Harry-Callaha...bs_sr_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1200070582&sr=1-2
http://www.amazon.com/Harry-Callaha...bs_sr_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1200070582&sr=1-2
jayjee
smile
A History of Sex by Andres Serrano
I just picked up a copy at photo l.a. (www.artfairsinc.com/photola/2008) at the opening night last night. The book is amazing! Nothing to do with rangefinders but ya know..
I just picked up a copy at photo l.a. (www.artfairsinc.com/photola/2008) at the opening night last night. The book is amazing! Nothing to do with rangefinders but ya know..
PaulL
Newbie
Light: Science and Magic: An Introduction to Photographic Lighting
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Light-Science-Introduction-Photographic-Lighting/dp/0240808193/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=gateway&qid=1202070934&sr=8-1
Photoshop Masking Compositing (Voices That Matter)
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Photoshop-Masking-Compositing-Voices-Matter/dp/0735712794/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=gateway&qid=1202071019&sr=8-1
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Light-Science-Introduction-Photographic-Lighting/dp/0240808193/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=gateway&qid=1202070934&sr=8-1
Photoshop Masking Compositing (Voices That Matter)
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Photoshop-Masking-Compositing-Voices-Matter/dp/0735712794/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=gateway&qid=1202071019&sr=8-1
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