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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In six pages master photographer Charles Glatzer is examined in an overview that includes his biography, photographic contributions, and an evaluation of his impact upon nature photography. Seven sources are listed in the bibliography.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGglatzer.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
information on using this paper properly! Photography literally means "writing with light" (Sandler, 2002, p. 8). In order to achieve this aesthetic phenomenon, a mechanical device for image
formation and a chemical process that enables the recording of an image are needed (Sandler, 2002). Back in 1827, one of French engineer Joseph Nicephore Niepces experiments resulted in
the production of a permanent image upon a metal plate (Sandler, 2002). However, the eight-hour exposure required and the lack of light-sensitive silver compounds utilized made Niepces process highly
impractical (Sandler, 2002). Nevertheless, this experimentation led to the earliest photographic forms, known as daguerreotype and calotype (or talbotype) (Sandler, 2002). French-born Jacques Mand? Daguerre invented the method
known as daguerreotype in the late nineteenth century that represented a practical and highly effective technique for using a camera to record images, which secured for him the title of
"father of photography" (Sandler, 2002, p. 8). The calotype (or talbotype) was the brainchild of William Henry Fox Talbot, who took longer to perfect his method than did Daguerre,
and while regarded as more important to the evolution of photography in the future, the technical precision and beauty of the daguerreotype had a greater aesthetic value (Sandler, 2002). The
role photography would play in society is immense. Photography would be used to record the most important events in world history. It would immortalize celebrations, funerals, wartime battles,
and peacetime diplomatic negotiations. Photographers would also use the persuasiveness of the camera to record the social injustices of racism and poverty. Environmentalists later adopted photographic techniques to
reinforce their arguments for environmental reform (Sandler, 2002). As modern civilization inflicted devastation upon the natural landscape via technology, nature photographers struggled to remind viewers of the importance of
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