📸🎨 Discovering the World Through the Lens of Ed Van Der Elsken [Dutch Photographer] 🎨📸

Описание к видео 📸🎨 Discovering the World Through the Lens of Ed Van Der Elsken [Dutch Photographer] 🎨📸

▶ Book On Sale: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BXNPVBN5
▶ Notebook On Sale: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BYLVMJL3
▶ Instagram:   / joel_ulises  

▶ Support My Channel:

If you'd like, you can support my channel with a small donation. Every little contribution is warmly welcomed. No matter how small, your donation will play a significant role in supporting me to continue creating and sharing meaningful content for all those who enjoy it. Thanks a bunch for your support!

▶ Paypal: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted...

Ed Van Der Elsken
https://ibashogallery.com/artists/126...

Bio
Ed van der Elsken 'enfant terrible' of Dutch photography, started to photograph at the end of the 1940s. In the 1950s he left Holland for Paris. There he photographed the bohemian society of Saint-Germain-de-Prés. He turned his photographs into a photographic novel. 'Love on the Left Bank' which instantly made him world famous.

Van der Elsken was married to the photographer Ata Kando for one year (1954-1955). With his second wife, Gerda van der Veen he traveled around the globe while photographing.

In 1959, he came to Japan for the first time and built close relationships with Eikoh Hosoe and other members of the influential photographers’ group VIVO. His influence on the Japanese photography world was immense. Japan was also an important photographic subject for Elsken, who visited Japan several times again from 1984-1988, where he had a large exhibition in Tokyo. The Dutch Ministry of Culture awarded him a grant in 1987 to complete a book on Japan. ‘De Ontdekking van Japan’ was published in 1988. On returning from a trip to Korea which was meant to result in a book about that country, Van der Elsken heard that he was suffering from terminal cancer.

Van der Elsken's work is highly subjective. His approach was confrontational, embracing the bright as well as the darker sides of human life. The unconventional technique and the gritty snapshot-like quality of his work have been of great importance in the development of contemporary photography.

Music:
"Take The A Train" by Learn Jazz Standards

#edvanderelsken
#blackandwhite​​
#photographer

Комментарии

Информация по комментариям в разработке