Ernst Haas - The American West

Author(s): Paul Lowe; Ernst Haas (Photographer)

Photography

This collection of striking color images from the American West is both a moving national portrait as well as a celebration of analog color photography from an undisputed genius of the form.


 


The photographer behind Life magazine's first ever all-color photographic essay, Ernst Haas made--and captured--history as an early adopter of Kodachrome film.


 


The Austrian-born artist had already established himself as a black and white photographer when he moved to America in 1951. But as a member of the renowned Magnum agency, he transformed the genre with his color-saturated images, the perfect medium for capturing America's geographic and cultural landscapes.


 


From desert storms, Route 66 gas stations, and Las Vegas neon to rolling prairie, dilapidated farms, small-town parades, and city sidewalks, Haas' perfectly composed images, contain a distinct pictorial language, suffused with poetry, pattern, and light. At the same time his pictures communicate a journalist's point of view, whether the subject is rural poverty, suburban comfort, or the myth of the American West.


 


The remarkable book offers a vision of America that feels both poignantly distant and reassuringly familiar.


 


 


Product Information

General Fields

  • : 9783791388250
  • : Prestel Publishing
  • : Prestel Publishing
  • : 0.56699
  • : 01 November 2022
  • : {"length"=>["11.75"], "width"=>["9.5"], "units"=>["Inches"]}
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : 224
  • : 779.092
  • : English
  • : Hardback
  • : Paul Lowe; Ernst Haas (Photographer)