About the Author:
Roger Fenton, born in Lancashire, England, was one of the pioneering forces in the nascent photographic world of the nineteenth century. Although he studied painting in Paris under Paul Delaroche, he soon became a champion of the new medium of photography. In 1847, he was one of the founding members of the Photographic Club, the first photographic society in Britain, and probably in the world. He was also responsible for the formation of the Royal Photographic Society. During his career, which lasted for ten years from 1852, he covered an unusually diverse and extensive range of subject matter, and earned a prominent place among the few universal photographers.
Richard Pare, author of the text, has been Curator of Photography for the Canadian Center for Architecture in New York since its inception in 1974.
Review:
"No one can touch Fenton in landscape: he seems to be to photography what Turner was to painting--our greatest landscape photographer; not that there is any similarity between the aerial perspectives of Turner, and the substantial and real we get transferred by Fenton. . . . There is such an artistic feeling about the whole of these pictures, the gradations of tint are so admirably given, that they cannot fail to strike the beholder as being something more than mere photographs."--Journal of the Photographic Society, 21 May, 1858
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.