Ads
related to: story of life photography magazine subscription
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
19 West 31st Street Cover of the September 13, 1948, issue featuring Josip Broz Tito Henri Huet's photograph of Thomas Cole on the cover of the February 11, 1966 issue Cover of March 25, 1966 issue with the feature story on LSD A subscription offer from Life in 1970. The U.S. price was then $2.55 for 19 issues.
Life received complaints about the graphic nature of the image, but felt that it was in line with the magazine's mission of telling a story of life and death through visual imagery. Frare's image also won the 2nd prize in the 1991 World Press Photo General News contest. [5]
He was the senior staff photographer at the time when Life ceased weekly publication. [3] Morse photographed the NASA space program from its inception, an assignment which outlasted Life as a weekly magazine. [1] On November 6, 2009, LIFE.com unveiled a photo retrospective of Project Mercury, America's first human
On November 23rd, 1936 Life was relaunched as the treasured picturesque magazine we know and love today. During its heyday the publication was full of images from the top photographers of their time.
Bill Ray (1936–2020) was an American photojournalist whose long career included twelve years of work for Life magazine spanning the 1960s. He was responsible for extensive photo essays and issue covers.
John Phillips (November 13, 1914 in Bouïra, Algeria – August 22, 1996 in Manhattan, New York City) was a photographer for Life magazine from the 1930s to the 1950s who was known for his war photographs. French by birth, John Phillips was born in Algeria, to a Welsh emigre father and an American mother.