The Gallery
Of Fine Art
One
photography historian claimed
that "the earliest
exponent of 'Fine Art'
or composition
photography was John Edwin
Mayall" who exhibited
daguerrotypes illustrating
the Lord's Prayer in 1851.
Successful attempts to
make fine art photography
can
be traced to Victorian
era practitioners
such as Julia Margaret
Cameron, Charles Lutwidge
Dodgson,
and Oscar Gustave Rejlander
and
others. In the U.S. F.
Holland Day, Alfred Steiglitz
and
Edward Steichen were instrumental
in making photography a
fine art, and Steiglitz
was especially
notable in introducing
it into
museum collections.
Until the late 1970s several genres
predominated, such as; nudes, portraits,
natural landscapes (exemplified
by Ansel Adams). Breakthrough 'star'
artists in the 1970s and 80s, such
as Sally Mann and Robert Mapplethorpe,
still relied heavily on such genres,
although seeing them with fresh
eyes. Others investigated a snapshot
aesthetic approach.
American organizations, such
as the Aperture Foundation and
the
Museum of Modern Art, have done
much to keep photography at the
forefront of the fine arts.
The Gallery Of Fine Art Consist
of Seven Rooms.
Click On "Exhibit Begins" to
Enter The Next Room.
Click On "Framed Images" to
View.