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Harry
Callahan

Elinore,
Chicago |

The
Cross,
1947 (printed 1970s) |
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Eleanor
and Barbara, Chicago, 1953
Artist's
Biography (1912 - 1999)
Harry Callahan was an American photographer born
in Detroit. Self-taught, he began taking pictures
in 1938 as a hobby and, inspired by the work of
Ansel Adams, began to produce professional-quality
photographs in the 1940s. His mature work is said
to mingle the precision of Americans like Adams
with the experimentalism of Europeans like Lázló
Moholy-Nagy. His black-and-white city streetscapes
and rural landscapes combine the commonplace with
the starkly abstract, exploring contrasts of sunlight
and shadow, tone and texture, static buildings and
hurried passersby, while his many lovingly distinctive
portraits of his wife and daughter are extremely
personal and intimate. He sometimes used multiple
exposures, and experimented with color slide film
in the 1940s, again making color images from 1977
on. An influential figure in modern photography,
he taught at Chicago's Institute of Design (1946-61)
and the Rhode Island School of Design (1961-77).
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