Page 80 - EOMS Catalog 2nd Edition 2016
P. 80

Katharina Hesse is a Beijing-based photographer who has worked throughout Asia for
two decades. Since 2005 Hesse has been freelancing for various publications and is represented by the Laif Agency, Germany. Her work has been shown internationally including Moving Walls 20 (2013), The Alice Austin House (Invisible Migrations, 2014), The Noorderlicht Photo Festival (2009/2010). (Photo shot in Beijing, China, 2015.)
Dorothea Lange (1895–1965) was an influential American documentary photographer and photojournalist, and best known for her Depression-era work for the Farm Security Administration (FSA). Lange’s photographs humanized the consequences of the Great Depression and influenced the development of documentary photography. (Photo shot in Siler City, NC, USA, 1939. Photo sponsors: Libby and Kate Eagles.)
Walker Evans (1903–1975) was an American photographer best known for his work for the Farm Security Administration (FSA) documenting the effects of the Great Depression. Many of his works are in the permanent collections of museums and have been the subject of retrospectives at such institutions as The Metropolitan Museum of Art or George Eastman House. (Photo shot in New Orleans, LA, USA, 1935. Photo sponsor: Penny Womble.)
57-58 A native of Missouri, John Trotter worked as a newspaper photojournalist for fourteen years until March 24, 1997 when he was nearly beaten to death by a half-dozen young men while on assignment for The Sacramento Bee. During his long recovery from that attack he photographed at Sierra Gates in Granite Bay, California, a brain injury rehabilitation residence, where he had lived after his release from the hospital. The photographs have become the heart of a book, The Burden of Memory, which is forthcoming. (Photo shot in Wanlaweyn, Somalia, 1992.)
Marjory Collins (1912–1985) was an American photojournalist. She is remembered above all for her coverage of the home front during World War II. As a result of a contribution for U.S. Camera and Travel about Hoboken, NJ, she was invited to work for the Foreign Service of the United States Office of War Information where she completed some fifty assignments. (Photo shot in New York, NY, USA, 1942.)
Elle Elskamp is a photographer living in a small village on the west coast of the Netherlands. As a retired chiropodist, she spends her free time photographing street scenes, people and anything she finds interesting. (Photo shot in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, 2015.)
Born in France in 1981, Barbara Doux, a former Art Director, has made her mission to photograph strangers. She lived the past year in a fitted van to be even closer of the encounter for her project: The Heart of France in 80 days. A winner of the Howard Chapnick Award from the Missouri Photo Workshop, Doux is currently based in Los Angeles.
59-60 Denis Dailleux, born in Angers, France, currently lives in Cairo, Egypt. He is represented by the gallery Camera Obscura (Paris) and the Galerie 127 (Marrakech). He has won several prizes; most recently 2nd place in the Staged Portrait category of World Press Photo 2014 for his series, Mother and Son. (Photo shot in Accra, Ghana, 2009. Photo sponsors: Scott and Susan Fecho.)


























































































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