Between 1957 and 1965, W. Eugene Smiththe eccentric Life photographer who snapped several of that magazine’s most iconic photos, like Life‘s “Dewey Defeats Truman,” before quitting due to what he felt ...
From 1957 to 1965, W. Eugene Smith took thousands of photographs and recorded thousands of hours of audio in his loft building, capturing the legendary musicians of the day. Smith exposed 1,447 rolls ...
He’d built a name for himself covering World War II in brutal photographic detail, but in 1955 famed lensman W. Eugene Smith quit his longtime job at Life magazine to snap shots of musicians in ...
In 1957, photographer W. Eugene Smith moved into a lower Manhattan loft which served as a late-night hangout for jazz musicians. He proceeded to... Dec. 6 | An overview of the stories hidden within ...
Every obsessive deserves his own obsessive Boswell, and W. Eugene Smith has his in Sam Stephenson. Smith was mid-century America’s greatest photojournalist. His work in Life magazine, during and after ...
In 1998, Sam Stephenson made a discovery in the vaults of an Arizona photo archive which would change the course of his life. What Stephenson found wasn’t a collection of photographs, but audio tapes: ...
After having a breakdown in the midst of working on a photo-essay on Pittsburgh in 1957, legendary photographer W. Eugene Smith holed up in a loft in New York's Chelsea, in the Tin Pan Alley area.
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