Frank O'Hara


Donna Jan Pridmore - "Influenced by French movements including surrealism, Dada, and Cubism, O'Hara combined the esoteric with the colloquial in both subject matter and style, incorporation in his poems the most mundane events, lowbrow pop culture, famous people and personal friends, gay sex, tender romantic love, abstract art, classical music, and New York City setting, in a way that was simultaneously offhanded, witty, and at times deeply personal."

Mary Daniel Hobson


Loss, 1996
"The immersion in Surrealism also encouraged me to begin working in a mixed media with photography. In 1996, I began to make the first layered collages in Mapping the Body, a seven-year series exploring the emotions and experiences housed in the body."
Mary Daniel Hobson

French illuminated manuscripts


Jean Froissart, Chroniques (Book 4)
Mara Hofmann - "This introduction to French illuminated manuscripts from the late fourteenth to the early sixteenth century presents examples of the work of the main artists of that time, as represented in the British Library."
British Library

The Vanishing Point


"Storm Drainage. Utility Tunnels + Mines. Power Generation. Other Structures. Daily Underground."
Michael Cook, BLDGBLOG

Woody Guthrie


"Okemah was one of the singiest, square dancingest, drinkingest, yellingest, preachingest, walkingest, talkingest, laughingest, cryingest, shootingest, fist fightingest, bleedingest, gamblingest, gun, club and razor carryingest of our ranch towns and farm towns, because it blossomed out into one of our first Oil Boom Towns." Pastures of Plenty
Woody Guthrie

Joseph Mills

,
Inner City, #1404. 1988.
"Though temporally distant from the Surrealist movement of the first half of the twentieth century, Mills' work stems from similar fascination with chane, subjectivity and the subconscious. In true surrealist style, Mills' steet photography transforms the seemingly quotidian into a dreamscape of life's minutiae."
Cohen Amador

1930s-40s in Color


The Library of Congress - "These vivid color photos from the Great Depression and World War II capture as era generally seen only in black-and-white."
flickr

Lantern Slides of Classical Antiquity


Claudian Aquedudct, Bryn Mawr College
Bryn Mawr - "Images are grouped by country, city and/or site, building (where appropiate), and more detailed location as required by the number of images available. ... All listings will be alphabetical, first by country, then by city within country, and so on."
Lantern Slides

Gravely Gorgeous


Notre Dame de Paris, Tower Galleries, ca. 1870-86
Gargoyles, Grotesques & the Nineteenth-Century Imagination. "So asked the twelfth-century Cistercian reformer, Bernard of Clairvaux. Fortunately, his condemnation of gargoyles and grotesques did not halt the carving of the fantastic beast during his day. By the time of the Renaissance, however, artisans had virtually ceased to carve them."
Gravely Gorgeous

Exploring the Early Americas


The Meeting of Cortes and Moctezuma, Second half of the seventeenth cenury Mexico
"Exploring the Early Americas features selection from the more than 3,000 rare maps, documents, paintings, prints, and artifacts that make up the Jay I. Kislal Collection at the Library of Congress."
Exploring the Early Americas

Irene Suchocki


"Faithfully capturing a scene is less impotant to me than finding that little bit of mystery or evoking a certain mood. A kind of beautiful-melancholy permeates many of my images. I like to explore the ethereal, the surreal, the whimsical, the mysterious, and the beautiful. I enjoy creating little poems for the eyes."
Irene Suchocki

Jean Follain


Jeffery Beam - "Follain's simple, miniature narratives evoke France right before The Great War and after World War II. Thus they revolve around the transformation that overtook European culture. You can feel Follain's nostalgia for the rural peasant life while terrors built and eventually burst around him."
Oyster Boy Review, The American Poetry Review - W.S. Merwin, Shearsman, No. 5 1982 - Gael Turnbull, Jean Beaupre, Daniel Keene, Wikiperia (France)

Noel Myles


"Noel Myles is a British photographer. He first studied fine arts. A painter in his early days, he then turned to photography, which he believes hasn't been used to the full extent of its possibilities. He strongly claims to be 'a photographer - full stop'."
Noel Myles

Susan Kapuscinski Gaylord


"After ten years of concentration in calligraphy, she turned to the artists' book which she felt provided a more intimate and flexible environment for her work. In 2005 she completed a thirteen-year project of meditative books that rested in cradles of wood, vines, and roots called Spirit Books Series."
SKG

The Russian Photography Collection, 1917-1945


Ivanov-Alliluyev. Young Girl In Woods, c. 1920.
"The Russian Photography Collection is comprised of approximately 7,000 gelatin-silver photography by the leading photojournalists work in Soviet Russia between the two World Wars."
1917-1945

James Schuyler


Photo credit: Gerard Malanga
"The career of James Schuyler has often been associated with the New York School of poets, John Ashbery, Frank O'Hara, Kenneth Koch, and Barbara Guest. Like any significant movement in the arts, such collocation of talent tends and anneal the achievements of the writers through their interaction but also to de-emphasize the individual successes or limitation of the group's members."
epc, PENN SOUND

Luis Gonzalez Palma


"Murmurarn los recuerdos - The memories were murmuring", 2003
"Guatemalan Luis Gonzalez Palma's hand-painted gelatin siver prints show haunting images of the Mayan Indians. He captures the essence of these people and their culture by portraying them in theatrical, almost mythological costumes that signify elements of their ancient rituals and beliefs."
Scheider Gallery Chicago

Michael Wolf


Architecture of Density
"Michael Wolf was born in Munich, Germany. He grew up in the USA and studied at UC Berkley and at the University of Essen in Germany. He has been living and working as a photographer and author in China for ten years."
Micheal Wolf

Franco Donaggio


"Franco Donaggio was born in 1958 in Chioggia, in the province of Venice. He approached photography at 15, because he was curious about the many potentialities photography as endless source of 'stories'."
Franco Donaggio

David Rumsey Map Collection


Henry Popple, 1733
"The David Rumsey Historical Map Collection has over 17,400 maps online. The collection focuses on rare 18th and 19th century North American and South American maps and other cartographic materials."
David Rumsey

Robert Weingarten


Dawn in Prague
"It has been asked whether a photographic image is a window or a mirror. Does it show you simply what the photographer saw or does it also give you insight into the emotions of the image maker? I hope my images do both."
Robert Weingarten

John Buckland Wright


Image No.7
University of Otago - "In the 1930's, 1940's and early 1950's three artists did a great deal to launch British engraving into the exciting waters of contemporary European art: the New Zealander John Buckland Wrigh and two Englishmen William Hayter and Anthony Gross."
John Buckland Wright

Arago: People, Postage & the Post


Smithsonian - "Arago is your resource to the study of philately and postal operations as seen through the National Postal Museum's collection."
Arago

Linda Thompson


George Graham - "The Thompsons went their seperate ways, and Linda Thompson fell victim to a rare condition called spasmodic dysphonia which disabled her voice, preventing her from performing, and at times even speaking for some 17 years. In 2002, she made a comeback with a fine recording called Fashionably Late, and now five years later, still suffering from occasional periods of dysphonia, which has limited her abilies live, she is out with Versatile Heart, another instant classic recording in which she resumes her role as one of the classic voices, of English folk, with the usual diverse collection of traditional songs, original music - comprising the majority - and a cover tune or two."
Wikipedia, NPR, Rounder - 1, Rounder - 2, Rounder - 3, MSN, Graham Weekly, YouTube

Richard Long


"Art as a formal and holistic description of the real space and experience of landscape and its most elemental materials. Nature has always been recorded by artists, from pre-historic cave paintings to 20th century landscape photography."
Richard Long

Blackwell's Herbal


Garden Cucumber and White Lily
British Library - "Elizabeth Blackwell's A Curious Herbal is notable both its beautiful illustration and for the unusual circumstances of its creation."
Turning the Pages

Medieval Manuscripts


The Spanish Forger, Miniature. Spain, S. XIX
Collection of Richard and Mary Rouse - "Manuscripts, whether medieval or renaissance, the ordinary as the grand, are basic to our understanding of history, literature, and art."
UCLA

The African-American Migration Experience


The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture Presents. The Transatlantic Slave Trade. Runaway Journeys. The Domestic Slave Trade. Colonization and Emigration. Haitian Immigration: 18th & 19th Centuries. The Western Migration. The Northern Migation. The Great Migration. Caribbean Immigration. Return South Migration. Haitian Immigtion: 20th Century. African Immigration.
The African-American Migration Experience

Astro Cruise


M16 - Eagle Nebula - Serpens
Philp Perkins - "Please spend a few minutes sharing my photographic adventure. How nice it would be if we could walk out on a starry night and simply see the splendours of the cosmos."

POEMS-FOR-ALL


Richard Hansen - "They're scattered around town - on buses, trains, cabs, in restrooms, bars, left along with the tip; stuffed into a stranger's back pocket. Whatever. Wherever. Small poems in small booklets half the size of a business card."
POEMS-FOR-ALL

Jenny Holzer


"For more than twenty-five years, Jenny Holzer has presented her astringent ideas, arguments, and sorrows in public places and international exhibitions, including the Venice Biennale, the Reichstag, and the Guggenheim Museums in New York and Bilbao."
Creativetime Presents

Paris Changing


Eugene Atget
The Morning News - "Between 1888 and 1927, Eugene Atget photographed thousands of Paris scenes, cataloguing the city as it grew into the modern era. Christopher Rauschenberg spent a year in the 1990s revisiting many of Atget's locations to see what had changed."
TMN Galleries

Myoung Ho Lee


lens culture - "Myoung Ho Lee, a young artist from South Korea, has produced an elaborate series of photograph that pose some unusual questions about representation, reality, art, envronment and seeing."
lens culture

Carmontelle's Transparency


The Duchess of Chaulnes as a Gardener in an Allee
The Getty - "This exhibition spotlights one of the most unusual objects in the Getty Museum's collection - a 12-foot-long transparent drawing by Louis de Carmontelle."

Jeffry Gugick


Looking up 8th Avenue
Jeff Gugick - "Here is my small collection of Tone Mapped - High Dynamic Range Images of New York City. Most of these images were shot with three to six separate exposures to create each. I always shoot my HDR photos with my camera on a tripod to help ensure that the images will align correctly during the creation of high dynamic image."
New York City in HDR