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    focused on the craftsmanship. The Alfred style of work did in its own way. The photographer did his own productive way to photograph the things. Alfred took the car in the printing of his photographs of platinum prints. The process used was yielding an image with a rich subtly varied tonal scale (Hostetler, 2004). He painted the compositional choice and use the natural elements like rain, snow and steam to unify the components of the scene. He edited the Camera work from the year 1902 to 1917. The Edward

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    means instead of alphabetically or numerically word use picture. By using picture it can be assembled that, it will be more convenient to remember password then word [1]. The importance of visual password is there is two ways how people cryptograph image in their mind, one is visual configuration & lexical description of the picture and another one is picture stored in human brain more comprehensively & it retrieve very easily quickly from memory. For support authentication there have various ways

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    To what extent has photography influenced the history and the development of contemporary painting?   Contents Abstract Page 3 Introduction Page 4 History of Photography in relations to Painting Page 5 Influence of Photography on Andy Warhol’s Paintings Page 9 Page 1 Page 1 Influence of Photography on Gerhard Richter’s Paintings Page 1 Page 1 Page 1 Influence of Photography on Luc Tuymans’ Paintings Page 1 Page 1 Page 1 Conclusion Page 1 Abstract – Cornelis Le Mair Throughout my time

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    pictures reproduced in the Photographer’s Eye were made for a number of reasons within a century and a quarter by different men with varying concerns and talents. In the book, John Szarkowski also addresses five codependent features of the photographic images. Specifically, these include: The Thing Itself, The Detail, The Frame, Time, and Vantage Point (Grange 4). These features are believed to have contributed to the establishment of various vocabularies and critical perceptions more often associated

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    childhood. In this paper, I will discuss two photographs that had the initial purpose of reform, but after much circulation and viewing, became an icon to child labor. Americans viewed these images so much, they lost their ability to strike change in the people, and because a common image to see. However, these images still brought reform even though they caused desensitization in people. Although there are other theories that oppose Sontag’s application to photographs of children in the Industrial Revolution

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    brought about a great revolution of the traditional arts, pushing it from depictions of a world we already knew to expressions of inward gestures and creativity. Photography conveniently replaced with images the words that were once essential to describing a visual. These images are in fact very different in nature from the continuous action of television, as well as the timeless sculpture. Abolishing the concept of time and space, the technology of the photo is thus fabricated

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    Through the Lens Essay

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    Does a Picture Really Tell A Thousand Words? According to John Berger, photographs from August 6th, 1945, are “images of hell.” (316) That was the day the US dropped an atomic bomb on Japan, killing countless innocent civilians and severely burning others. In his essay, “Hiroshima,” Berger faces the idea that our culture has “abandoned” the “concept of evil.” (320) Countless pictures seem to be the only thing left of that day, and from Berger’s perspective, the

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    used to alter images. In todays day and age, photoshop has become the norm. It is everywhere and it cannot be escaped. Photoshop is used on everything and everyone, and it is affecting us at an extremely negative rate. Due to the works of Photoshop being used on every single media platform, society has adapted to the perfection in photos that were altered by Photoshop. What the world sees when they look at a photoshopped picture is what a company views as perfection, and this image creates an unhealthy

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    Discuss the notion of the found image in the work of John Stezaker. What particular temporal qualities do you think the found image adds to these works? Photography has always been a way of documenting time, a memory sealed into an image and held there forever. This is a brief documentation of a place or a person capsuled in time, with the history and the memory intertwined with the image. However, as the photographs age and the decades pass, the images stay the same but the memory fades away along

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    photography as an art that shows reality in its actual state, rather than creating the ideal image without blemishes or imperfections. The speaker also reflects on his attraction towards the woman pictured in the album as she appears in the various stages of her life. This attraction is not only towards photographs, but also towards the elements of the photographs that show her as a real person, not an ideal image. However, the photographs also bring him pain, for the subject of the photo will always

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