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Todd Webb

Todd Webb (September 5, 1905 – April 15, 2000) was an American photographer notable for documenting everyday life and architecture in cities such as New York City, Paris as well as from the American west.[1] He traveled extensively during his long life and had important friendships with artists such as Berenice Abbott, Walker Evans, Alfred Stieglitz, Georgia O'Keeffe, Ansel Adams, Dorothea Lange,[2] and Harry Callahan.[1]

Todd Webb
Todd Webb
Born(1905-09-05)September 5, 1905
DiedApril 15, 2000(2000-04-15) (aged 94)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationPhotographer
Years active1940–2000

Early life edit

Webb was born in Detroit, United States, in 1905 and grew up there and in a Quaker community in Ontario.[1] From 1924 to 1929 he worked as a bank teller and clerk at a brokerage firm in Detroit; in another account, he was a successful stockbroker during the 1920s but lost his earnings during the Crash before the Depression.[3] During the Depression beginning in 1929, he moved to California and worked as a prospector and earned a meager living.[1] During these years he also worked as a fire ranger for the United States Forestry Service. Webb reportedly wrote short stories which were unpublished.[3] After 1934, Webb returned to Detroit and worked for the automobile manufacturer Chrysler[1] in their export division.[3] In 1937, he visited a friend in Panama in search of gold, but had little success. But in Panama, he brought along a camera donated by his former employer, Chrysler.[1]

Career edit

Early career edit

Webb returned to Detroit and studied at the Detroit Camera Club. He met photographer Harry Callahan. In 1940, he completed a ten‑day workshop with Ansel Adams as his teacher.[1] In 1941, he visited Rocky Mountain State Park with Harry Callahan, and realized during this trip that he was drawn more to the urban cityscape, and although he found Adams to be an inspiration, he would not make photographs like his teacher. During World War II, Webb was a photographer for the United States Navy and was deployed to the South Pacific theater of operations.[1]

New York City years edit

After World War II, in 1945, Webb moved to New York City and began his career as a professional photographer.[1] He made key friendships with Alfred Stieglitz and Georgia O'Keeffe as well as Beaumont Newhall, Berenice Abbott, Helen Levitt, and Minor White.[3] Webb began a remarkable project of walking the streets of New York City with his heavy camera and tripod and photographing people and buildings he encountered.[4] What set these photos apart was their "straightforward, descriptive clarity" even though they were often of familiar views.[4] One large 10-foot–long panorama photograph which was critically acclaimed[5] showed a section of Sixth Avenue from 43rd–44th streets which, in 1991, was seen as a "visual time capsule of the city" and was described as a "stunner."[6] Webb's photos reflected the photographer's sense of discovery and captured the times, such as photos of hand-painted banners over apartment house doors saying "Welcome Home, G.I.s".[4] In one photograph, Webb went to the top of the RCA Building and shot south using a backlit technique, which captured the Empire State Building at night.[7] The best photographs, according to New York Times art critic Charles Hagen, contained the "simple geometries of urban architecture" in a "simple elegance"; Hagen thought Webb's New York City photographs were his best.[4] In 1946, he had his first solo exhibition of his photographs at the Museum of the City of New York.

In 1947, Webb was hired by Fortune magazine[3] and he worked with professional photographers funded by the Standard Oil Company led by Roy Stryker and the group included notable photographers such as Sol Libsohn.[8] According to the New York Times, the team of professional photographers was "given amazingly free rein by its corporate sponsor" to produce a documentary about oil.[8] One of these photographs, Webb's Pittsburgh Panorama (ca. 1950) shows a grim industrial view towards Pittsburgh from a hill near Westinghouse Bridge that takes in a bare river valley across which snake highways and railways and a row of tall smokestacks in the distance.[9][10] Curator Edward Steichen selected it for the 1955 Museum of Modern Art exhibition The Family of Man, seen by 9 million visitors on its world tour.[11][12][13] However, in his memoir, Webb records his disappointment with the way images were "over-enlarged to billboard size" losing "all the qualities that make photographs unique."[14]

Webb traveled to Paris, France, in 1949 and married fellow American Lucille Minqueau.[1] In Paris, Webb produced a "vivid record" of the city which earned him recognition.[1] Then, Webbs moved back to New York City to live in Greenwich Village in 1952.

1955-1956, walking across America edit

In 1955, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship to photographically record pioneer trails of early settlers of the western United States. During that year he walked from New York City to San Francisco.

1957-58, United Nations and Africa edit

Webb was hired in 1957 by the United Nations to photograph its General Assembly. He won a contract to photograph Sub–Saharan Africa in 1958. Over the course of six months, he photographed extensively in Ghana, Sudan, Togo, Somalia, Tanzania, and Ethiopia. These rich color images were published in 2021 as a book to compliment the exhibition at the Minneapolis Institute of Art titled Todd Webb in Africa, Outside the Frame.

O'Keeffe years edit

The Webbs moved to Santa Fe in New Mexico around 1961.[1] Webb's photos of his friend Georgia O'Keeffe suggested not only a "loner, severe figure and self-made person" but that there was an "intense connection" between Webb and O'Keeffe.[15] While O'Keeffe was known to have a "prickly personality", Webb's photographs portray her with a kind of "quietness and calm" suggesting a relaxed friendship, and revealing new contours of O'Keeffe's character.[16] Webb's landscape photographs as well as photos of the artist walking among the sagebrush bring O'Keeffe to life "even in pictures where she doesn't appear", according to Chicago Tribune art critic Abigail Foerstner.[17] His photos suggest an "ageless spirit" which was "weathered and indomitable" like desert rock formations.[18] These photos were done using matte finish paper and appear in a book entitled Georgia O'Keeffe: The Artist's Landscape.[17]

Later years edit

The Webbs lived in the Provence region of France, around 1970, and he continued to photograph regularly, and later lived, for a period, in Bath, England.[1] The Webbs finally settled in the state of Maine, living in the city of Portland, based on the suggestion of a friend.[1] In 1978, Webb won a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and continued to live and work in Maine. Webb died in 2000 in Lewiston, Maine.[1]

Legacy edit

Todd Webb's photographs have been displayed in 25 major museum collections including the MOMA in New York, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.[1] Webb's photographic archive is located in Portland, Maine, where reproduction rights and sales of his prints are managed.

In 2006, the Hallmark Greeting Cards Corporation acquired at least 161 of Webb's photographs, and in 2006 decided to give them away in a generous donation to the Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City.[19]

In 2017, the Todd Webb Archive refurbished its website with biographical data, collection information, and a column regarding news events. In April 2017, an exhibition titled "A City Seen" opened at the Museum of the City of New York. Curated by Sean Corcoran, the exhibit was a comprehensive survey of Webb's work in New York during the 1940s. The book I See a City: Todd Webb's New York (Thames & Hudson, 2017) was published in conjunction with the exhibition.

Webb's estate is managed by Betsy Evans Hunt who serves as the Executive Director of the Todd Webb Archive.[citation needed]

Awards edit

Webb was awarded the following:[citation needed]

Publications edit

The following publications relate to Todd Webb:[citation needed]

  • Gold Strikes and Ghost Towns, Doubleday Press, 1961
  • The Gold Rush Trails and The Road To Oregon, Doubleday Press, 1963
  • Nineteenth Century Texas Homes, University of Texas Press, 1966
  • Todd Webb/Photographs, The Amon Carter Museum
  • Georgia O'Keeffe, The Artist's Landscape, Twelve Trees Press, 1984[17]
  • Todd Webb: Photographs of New York and Paris, Hallmark Cards, 1996
  • Looking Back; Memoirs and Photographs, University of New Mexico, 1991
  • Todd Webb: New York, 1946, 21st Editions, 2015
  • I See a City: Todd Webb's New York, Thames & Hudson, 2017
  • Todd Webb in Africa, Outside the Frame, Thames & Hudson, 2021

Collections edit

Webb's work is in the following collections:[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p staff writer (April 22, 2000). "Todd Webb, 94, Peripatetic Photographer". The New York Times. Retrieved October 10, 2010. Todd Webb, a photographer who documented the everyday life and architecture of New York, Paris and the American West, died last Saturday at Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston. He was 94 and lived in Auburn, Me.
  2. ^ Grace Glueck (May 2, 1997). "Dynamo Who Left Her Mark as Curator". The New York Times. Retrieved October 10, 2010. and Todd Webb's intimate glimpse of the photographer Dorothea Lange, known for her Depression images of the 1930s.
  3. ^ a b c d e . Luxury Bazaar. 2010. Archived from the original on December 31, 2010. Retrieved October 12, 2010. He had been a successful stockbroker in the Twenties, and then lost his earnings in The Crash that precursored the Great Depression.
  4. ^ a b c d CHARLES HAGEN (September 22, 1995). "Art in Review". The New York Times. Retrieved October 10, 2010. In 1945, after being discharged from the Navy, Todd Webb moved to New York City and began a remarkable project. ...
  5. ^ Bob Keyes (May 30, 2010). "Photographer's estate updates, improves website". Maine Sunday Telegram. Retrieved October 10, 2010. The estate of Todd Webb announced a recent refurbishment of its website, toddwebbphotographs.com. ...
  6. ^ CHARLES HAGEN (December 27, 1991). "Art in Review". The New York Times. Retrieved October 10, 2010. The stunner of the show, though, is a 10-foot-long panorama by Todd Webb from 1948 that depicts, in its entirety, Sixth Avenue between 43d and 44th Streets.
  7. ^ WILLIAM MEYERS (December 27, 2007). "The Other City of Lights". The New York Sun. Retrieved October 10, 2010. The Empire State Building ... It is also seen backlit in Todd Webb's "South From the Top of the RCA Building" (1945)
  8. ^ a b SYLVIA NASAR (January 25, 2001). "Sol Libsohn, 86, Photographer Who Captured Ordinary Life". The New York Times. Retrieved October 10, 2010. Libsohn joined a team of photographers at Standard Oil Company ... The team, led by Roy Stryker, included, apart from Mr. Libsohn, Gordon Parks, Esther Bubley, Russell Lee, John Vachon and Todd Webb and was given amazingly free rein by its corporate sponsor.
  9. ^ Webb, Todd. "Pittsburgh Panorama (Standard Oil)". The Visual Telling of Stories.
  10. ^ Steven Wright Plattner; Esther Bubley; Roy Emerson Stryker (1983). Roy Stryker, U.S.A., 1943–1950 : the Standard Oil (New Jersey) photography project (1st ed.). University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-77028-7.
  11. ^ Edward Steichen; Carl Sandburg; Dorothy Norman; Leo Lionni; Jerry Mason; Ezra Stoller (1955). The family of man: The photographic exhibition. Museum of Modern Art by Simon and Schuster in collaboration with the Maco Magazine Corporation.
  12. ^ Gerd Hurm; Anke Reitz; Shamoon Zamir, eds. (2018), The family of man revisited : photography in a global age, London I.B.Tauris, ISBN 978-1-78672-297-3
  13. ^ Eric J. Sandeen (1995), Picturing an exhibition : the family of man and 1950s America (1st ed.), University of New Mexico Press, ISBN 978-0-8263-1558-8
  14. ^ Webb, Todd (1991). Looking back : memoirs and photographs (1st ed.). University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 978-0-8263-1294-5.
  15. ^ MICHAEL KILIAN (August 1, 2002). "Santa Fe exhibit paints a different picture of O'Keeffe". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 10, 2010. But Santa Fe's Georgia O'Keeffe Museum ... close and longtime friend, photographer Todd Webb (1905–2000), ...
  16. ^ WILLIAM ZIMMER (December 31, 2000). "ART; Exploring the Affinities Among Painting, Music and Dance". The New York Times. Retrieved October 10, 2010. O'Keeffe and Webb had known each other for a long time when he began to photograph her in the mid-1980s....
  17. ^ a b c Abigail Foerstner (December 5, 1986). "Books For Photographers, Fans". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 10, 2010. Georgia O'Keeffe: The Artist's Landscape (Twelve Trees Press, $45): Todd Webb's dramatic landscapes and scenes at O'Keeffe's Ghost Ranch ...
  18. ^ Abigail Foerstner (September 7, 1990). "Six Artists Portray The Real And The Mythical American West". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 10, 2010. Webb photographed his friend O'Keeffe for years during the summers ...
  19. ^ KATHRYN SHATTUCK (February 18, 2006). "For a Dear Museum: Love, Hallmark". The New York Times. Retrieved October 10, 2010. Last month the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art ... 161 by Todd Webb;

External links edit

  • Official Todd Webb website
  • Todd Webb on Art Encyclopedia
  • Todd Webb Archive

todd, webb, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, november, 2022,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Todd Webb news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Todd Webb September 5 1905 April 15 2000 was an American photographer notable for documenting everyday life and architecture in cities such as New York City Paris as well as from the American west 1 He traveled extensively during his long life and had important friendships with artists such as Berenice Abbott Walker Evans Alfred Stieglitz Georgia O Keeffe Ansel Adams Dorothea Lange 2 and Harry Callahan 1 Todd WebbTodd WebbBorn 1905 09 05 September 5 1905Detroit Michigan United StatesDiedApril 15 2000 2000 04 15 aged 94 NationalityAmericanOccupationPhotographerYears active1940 2000 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Early career 2 2 New York City years 2 3 1955 1956 walking across America 2 4 1957 58 United Nations and Africa 2 5 O Keeffe years 2 6 Later years 2 7 Legacy 3 Awards 4 Publications 5 Collections 6 References 7 External linksEarly life editWebb was born in Detroit United States in 1905 and grew up there and in a Quaker community in Ontario 1 From 1924 to 1929 he worked as a bank teller and clerk at a brokerage firm in Detroit in another account he was a successful stockbroker during the 1920s but lost his earnings during the Crash before the Depression 3 During the Depression beginning in 1929 he moved to California and worked as a prospector and earned a meager living 1 During these years he also worked as a fire ranger for the United States Forestry Service Webb reportedly wrote short stories which were unpublished 3 After 1934 Webb returned to Detroit and worked for the automobile manufacturer Chrysler 1 in their export division 3 In 1937 he visited a friend in Panama in search of gold but had little success But in Panama he brought along a camera donated by his former employer Chrysler 1 Career editEarly career edit Webb returned to Detroit and studied at the Detroit Camera Club He met photographer Harry Callahan In 1940 he completed a ten day workshop with Ansel Adams as his teacher 1 In 1941 he visited Rocky Mountain State Park with Harry Callahan and realized during this trip that he was drawn more to the urban cityscape and although he found Adams to be an inspiration he would not make photographs like his teacher During World War II Webb was a photographer for the United States Navy and was deployed to the South Pacific theater of operations 1 New York City years edit After World War II in 1945 Webb moved to New York City and began his career as a professional photographer 1 He made key friendships with Alfred Stieglitz and Georgia O Keeffe as well as Beaumont Newhall Berenice Abbott Helen Levitt and Minor White 3 Webb began a remarkable project of walking the streets of New York City with his heavy camera and tripod and photographing people and buildings he encountered 4 What set these photos apart was their straightforward descriptive clarity even though they were often of familiar views 4 One large 10 foot long panorama photograph which was critically acclaimed 5 showed a section of Sixth Avenue from 43rd 44th streets which in 1991 was seen as a visual time capsule of the city and was described as a stunner 6 Webb s photos reflected the photographer s sense of discovery and captured the times such as photos of hand painted banners over apartment house doors saying Welcome Home G I s 4 In one photograph Webb went to the top of the RCA Building and shot south using a backlit technique which captured the Empire State Building at night 7 The best photographs according to New York Times art critic Charles Hagen contained the simple geometries of urban architecture in a simple elegance Hagen thought Webb s New York City photographs were his best 4 In 1946 he had his first solo exhibition of his photographs at the Museum of the City of New York In 1947 Webb was hired by Fortune magazine 3 and he worked with professional photographers funded by the Standard Oil Company led by Roy Stryker and the group included notable photographers such as Sol Libsohn 8 According to the New York Times the team of professional photographers was given amazingly free rein by its corporate sponsor to produce a documentary about oil 8 One of these photographs Webb s Pittsburgh Panorama ca 1950 shows a grim industrial view towards Pittsburgh from a hill near Westinghouse Bridge that takes in a bare river valley across which snake highways and railways and a row of tall smokestacks in the distance 9 10 Curator Edward Steichen selected it for the 1955 Museum of Modern Art exhibition The Family of Man seen by 9 million visitors on its world tour 11 12 13 However in his memoir Webb records his disappointment with the way images were over enlarged to billboard size losing all the qualities that make photographs unique 14 Webb traveled to Paris France in 1949 and married fellow American Lucille Minqueau 1 In Paris Webb produced a vivid record of the city which earned him recognition 1 Then Webbs moved back to New York City to live in Greenwich Village in 1952 1955 1956 walking across America edit In 1955 he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship to photographically record pioneer trails of early settlers of the western United States During that year he walked from New York City to San Francisco 1957 58 United Nations and Africa edit Webb was hired in 1957 by the United Nations to photograph its General Assembly He won a contract to photograph Sub Saharan Africa in 1958 Over the course of six months he photographed extensively in Ghana Sudan Togo Somalia Tanzania and Ethiopia These rich color images were published in 2021 as a book to compliment the exhibition at the Minneapolis Institute of Art titled Todd Webb in Africa Outside the Frame O Keeffe years edit The Webbs moved to Santa Fe in New Mexico around 1961 1 Webb s photos of his friend Georgia O Keeffe suggested not only a loner severe figure and self made person but that there was an intense connection between Webb and O Keeffe 15 While O Keeffe was known to have a prickly personality Webb s photographs portray her with a kind of quietness and calm suggesting a relaxed friendship and revealing new contours of O Keeffe s character 16 Webb s landscape photographs as well as photos of the artist walking among the sagebrush bring O Keeffe to life even in pictures where she doesn t appear according to Chicago Tribune art critic Abigail Foerstner 17 His photos suggest an ageless spirit which was weathered and indomitable like desert rock formations 18 These photos were done using matte finish paper and appear in a book entitled Georgia O Keeffe The Artist s Landscape 17 Later years edit The Webbs lived in the Provence region of France around 1970 and he continued to photograph regularly and later lived for a period in Bath England 1 The Webbs finally settled in the state of Maine living in the city of Portland based on the suggestion of a friend 1 In 1978 Webb won a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and continued to live and work in Maine Webb died in 2000 in Lewiston Maine 1 Legacy edit Todd Webb s photographs have been displayed in 25 major museum collections including the MOMA in New York and the National Gallery of Art in Washington D C 1 Webb s photographic archive is located in Portland Maine where reproduction rights and sales of his prints are managed In 2006 the Hallmark Greeting Cards Corporation acquired at least 161 of Webb s photographs and in 2006 decided to give them away in a generous donation to the Nelson Atkins Museum in Kansas City 19 In 2017 the Todd Webb Archive refurbished its website with biographical data collection information and a column regarding news events In April 2017 an exhibition titled A City Seen opened at the Museum of the City of New York Curated by Sean Corcoran the exhibit was a comprehensive survey of Webb s work in New York during the 1940s The book I See a City Todd Webb s New York Thames amp Hudson 2017 was published in conjunction with the exhibition Webb s estate is managed by Betsy Evans Hunt who serves as the Executive Director of the Todd Webb Archive citation needed Awards editWebb was awarded the following citation needed Guggenheim Fellowship 1955 amp 1956 National Endowment for the Arts Grant 1978Publications editThe following publications relate to Todd Webb citation needed Gold Strikes and Ghost Towns Doubleday Press 1961 The Gold Rush Trails and The Road To Oregon Doubleday Press 1963 Nineteenth Century Texas Homes University of Texas Press 1966 Todd Webb Photographs The Amon Carter Museum Georgia O Keeffe The Artist s Landscape Twelve Trees Press 1984 17 Todd Webb Photographs of New York and Paris Hallmark Cards 1996 Looking Back Memoirs and Photographs University of New Mexico 1991 Todd Webb New York 1946 21st Editions 2015 I See a City Todd Webb s New York Thames amp Hudson 2017 Todd Webb in Africa Outside the Frame Thames amp Hudson 2021Collections editWebb s work is in the following collections citation needed Addison Gallery of American Art Andover Massachusetts Akron Art Museum Akron Ohio Allentown Art Museum Allentown Pennsylvania The American Embassy Paris France Amon Carter Museum Fort Worth Texas Biblioteque Nationale Paris France Bowdoin College Museum of Art Bowdoin College Brunswick Maine Boston Athenaeum Boston Massachusetts Carnegie Museum University of Maine at Orono Orono Maine citation needed Center for Creative Photography Tucson Arizona Chicago Art Institute Chicago Illinois Colby College Art Museum Waterville Maine Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art Bentonville Arkansas The David Winton Bell Gallery at Brown University Providence Rhode Island Denver Art Museum Denver Colorado George Eastman House Rochester New York Georgia O Keeffe Museum Santa Fe New Mexico The J Paul Getty Museum Los Angeles California Graham Nash Collection Los Angeles California Henry Art Gallery University of Washington Seattle Washington Historic New Orleans Collection amp Archives of American Art New Orleans Louisiana Institute of Art Detroit Michigan The International Center of Photography New York City Judy and Leonard Lauder Collection New York City Lehigh University Art Gallery Bethlehem Pennsylvania Los Angeles County Museum of Art Los Angeles California Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Middlebury College Museum of Art Middlebury Vermont Museum of Fine Arts Boston Massachusetts Museum of Fine Arts Houston Texas Museum of Fine Arts Minneapolis Minnesota Museum of Modern Art Tokyo Japan Museum of Modern Art MOMA New York City Museum of the City of New York New York City The Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University The National Portrait Gallery Washington DC The National Museum Tokyo Japan The National Museum of Mexican Art Chicago Illinois The Nelson Atkins Museum of Art Kansas City Missouri New Mexico Museum of Fine Arts Santa Fe New Mexico New York Public Library New York Northwestern University Chicago Illinois The Painting Gallery Munich Germany Pomona College Museum of Art Claremont California Portland Museum of Art Portland Maine Rice University Houston Texas Rochester Institute of Art Rochester New York Royal Photographic Society London England San Antonio Museum of Art San Antonio Texas San Francisco Museum of Modern Art San Francisco California Santa Barbara Museum of Art Santa Barbara California Smith College Art Museum Northampton Massachusetts The Smithsonian Institution Washington DC University of New Mexico Art Museum Albuquerque New Mexico Worcester Museum of Art Worcester MassachusettsReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p staff writer April 22 2000 Todd Webb 94 Peripatetic Photographer The New York Times Retrieved October 10 2010 Todd Webb a photographer who documented the everyday life and architecture of New York Paris and the American West died last Saturday at Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston He was 94 and lived in Auburn Me Grace Glueck May 2 1997 Dynamo Who Left Her Mark as Curator The New York Times Retrieved October 10 2010 and Todd Webb s intimate glimpse of the photographer Dorothea Lange known for her Depression images of the 1930s a b c d e Todd Webb 1905 2000 Luxury Bazaar 2010 Archived from the original on December 31 2010 Retrieved October 12 2010 He had been a successful stockbroker in the Twenties and then lost his earnings in The Crash that precursored the Great Depression a b c d CHARLES HAGEN September 22 1995 Art in Review The New York Times Retrieved October 10 2010 In 1945 after being discharged from the Navy Todd Webb moved to New York City and began a remarkable project Bob Keyes May 30 2010 Photographer s estate updates improves website Maine Sunday Telegram Retrieved October 10 2010 The estate of Todd Webb announced a recent refurbishment of its website toddwebbphotographs com CHARLES HAGEN December 27 1991 Art in Review The New York Times Retrieved October 10 2010 The stunner of the show though is a 10 foot long panorama by Todd Webb from 1948 that depicts in its entirety Sixth Avenue between 43d and 44th Streets WILLIAM MEYERS December 27 2007 The Other City of Lights The New York Sun Retrieved October 10 2010 The Empire State Building It is also seen backlit in Todd Webb s South From the Top of the RCA Building 1945 a b SYLVIA NASAR January 25 2001 Sol Libsohn 86 Photographer Who Captured Ordinary Life The New York Times Retrieved October 10 2010 Libsohn joined a team of photographers at Standard Oil Company The team led by Roy Stryker included apart from Mr Libsohn Gordon Parks Esther Bubley Russell Lee John Vachon and Todd Webb and was given amazingly free rein by its corporate sponsor Webb Todd Pittsburgh Panorama Standard Oil The Visual Telling of Stories Steven Wright Plattner Esther Bubley Roy Emerson Stryker 1983 Roy Stryker U S A 1943 1950 the Standard Oil New Jersey photography project 1st ed University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 77028 7 Edward Steichen Carl Sandburg Dorothy Norman Leo Lionni Jerry Mason Ezra Stoller 1955 The family of man The photographic exhibition Museum of Modern Art by Simon and Schuster in collaboration with the Maco Magazine Corporation Gerd Hurm Anke Reitz Shamoon Zamir eds 2018 The family of man revisited photography in a global age London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 78672 297 3 Eric J Sandeen 1995 Picturing an exhibition the family of man and 1950s America 1st ed University of New Mexico Press ISBN 978 0 8263 1558 8 Webb Todd 1991 Looking back memoirs and photographs 1st ed University of New Mexico Press ISBN 978 0 8263 1294 5 MICHAEL KILIAN August 1 2002 Santa Fe exhibit paints a different picture of O Keeffe Chicago Tribune Retrieved October 10 2010 But Santa Fe s Georgia O Keeffe Museum close and longtime friend photographer Todd Webb 1905 2000 WILLIAM ZIMMER December 31 2000 ART Exploring the Affinities Among Painting Music and Dance The New York Times Retrieved October 10 2010 O Keeffe and Webb had known each other for a long time when he began to photograph her in the mid 1980s a b c Abigail Foerstner December 5 1986 Books For Photographers Fans Chicago Tribune Retrieved October 10 2010 Georgia O Keeffe The Artist s Landscape Twelve Trees Press 45 Todd Webb s dramatic landscapes and scenes at O Keeffe s Ghost Ranch Abigail Foerstner September 7 1990 Six Artists Portray The Real And The Mythical American West Chicago Tribune Retrieved October 10 2010 Webb photographed his friend O Keeffe for years during the summers KATHRYN SHATTUCK February 18 2006 For a Dear Museum Love Hallmark The New York Times Retrieved October 10 2010 Last month the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art 161 by Todd Webb External links editOfficial Todd Webb website Todd Webb on Art Encyclopedia Todd Webb Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Todd Webb amp oldid 1189772731, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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