Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Dorothy Norman (née Stecker; 28 March 1905 – 12 April 1997) was an American photographer, writer, editor, arts patron and advocate for social change.

  2. Dorothy Norman (1905-1997) was a student and lover of Alfred Stieglitz, and a portraitist of many artists and writers. She also documented the social changes in India and Japan, and wrote books on Stieglitz and other topics.

  3. Norman was better known for her writing, humanitarianism, and work done on behalf of Alfred Stieglitz and his legacy than her own photography. She worked as a photographer primarily between 1931 and the mid-1950s, and her efforts received little attention.

  4. Dorothy Norman (née Stecker; 28 March 1905 – 12 April 1997) was an American photographer, writer, editor, arts patron and advocate for social change.

  5. BIOGRAPHY. 1905-1997. Dorothy Norman interacted with artists and engaged in the arts on many levels. She wrote a New York Times column and edited and wrote several books, was mentored by Alfred Stieglitz (who became her lover) and maintained a well-respected artists’ salon.

  6. Dorothy Norman's photographs have been compared to the private, quiet, and intimate poems of Emily Dickinson, but recognition of her work as a photographer tended to be eclipsed by her activities as a prominent writer, biographer, editor, and social activist.

  7. Dorothy Norman (1905-1997) was a photographer, writer, and social activist who documented the artistic and cultural community in New York City. She learned from and portrayed Alfred Stieglitz, her mentor and friend, and donated a large collection of his and her photographs to the Philadelphia Museum of Art.