Ad
related to: photography gallery oxford street huntsville
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Huntsville Madison Science, rocketry and space exploration [156] Vaughan-Smitherman Museum: Selma Dallas Depicts Selma’s history until about 1960 [157] U.S. Veterans Memorial Museum: Huntsville: Madison Designated by the Alabama House of Representatives as the State of Alabama Veterans Memorial Museum. Run entirely by volunteers. [158]
Huntsville Museum of Art (HMA) is a museum located in Huntsville, Alabama. HMA sits in Big Spring Park within Downtown Huntsville, and serves as a magnet for cultural activities. In 1957, the Huntsville Art League and Museum Association (HALMA) was formed with the goal of growing the arts community within Huntsville and of one day having a museum.
Paddy Summerfield (18 February 1947 – 11 April 2024) was a British photographer who lived and worked in Oxford all his life. [1]Summerfield is known for his "evocative series of black and white images, shot on 35mm film, which co-opt the traditional genre of documentary photography to realise a more personal and inward looking vision."
In-Public (sometimes written iN-PUBLiC) is an international group of street photographers that operates as a collective. [1] [2] It was established in 2000 by Nick Turpin with the intention of bringing together like minded photographers to hold exhibitions, produce books and conduct workshops and promote street photography.
Impressions Gallery is a charity, a not-for-profit organisation, funded by Arts Council England and Bradford Metropolitan District Council. [2]The gallery is host to a temporary exhibitions programme with on average six exhibitions each year, often solo retrospective shows of mid-career photographers, and also some group shows.
Barraud's studios were at 96 Gloucester Place, Portman Square in 1883, at 263 Oxford Street ("A few doors west of 'The Circus'") between 1883 and 1891, at 73 Piccadilly from 1893 to 1896, and at 126 Piccadilly in 1897. [5] Another studio was located at 92 Bold Street, Liverpool.
The Oxford Street store relocated to 108–110 Regent Street in 1866–1867. [ a ] The London Stereoscopic Company was dissolved in 1922, [ 10 ] although a business bearing the same name was established in 2005, [ 11 ] championed by rock guitarist Brian May .
Edited by Val Williams. Salford: Viewpoint Photography Gallery; Derby: Montage Gallery, 1997. ISBN 0-901952-81-8. Daniel Meadows. The Bus: The Free Photographic Omnibus, 1973–2001: An Adventure in Documentary. London: Harvill, 2001. ISBN 1-86046-842-X. [n 4] Val Williams. Daniel Meadows: Edited Photographs from the 70s and 80s.