




Click here to see more images from Alfred Eisenstaedt
Alfred Eisenstaedt December 6, 1898 – August 24, 1995 was a German American photographer and photojournalist. He is renowned for his candid photographs, frequently made using a 35mm Leica M3 rangefinder camera. He is best known for his photograph capturing the celebration of V-J Day.
Eisenstaedt was successful enough to become a full-time photographer in 1929. Four years later he photographed a meeting between Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini in Italy. Other notable pictures taken by Eisenstaedt in his early career include a waiter ice skating in St. Moritz in 1932 and Joseph Goebbels at the League of Nations in Geneva in 1933. Because of oppression in Hitler's Nazi Germany, Eisenstaedt emigrated to the United States in 1935, where he lived in New York, for the rest of his life. He worked as a photographer for Life magazine from 1936 to 1972. His photos of news events and celebrities, such as Dagmar, Sophia Loren and Ernest Hemingway, appeared on 90 Life covers.
Hi
ReplyDeleteAgain you must refer to specific images you research and talk about them and link into your writing, choose around 10 images as a minimum and comment on maybe 3 or 4 as a style and maybe 2 as a style for you to copy.
Your research and work you take must be linked they are not 2 different things.
steve