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When coal was king, coal miners risked their lives to fuel America. Photographer Russell Lee captured the hardships and privations (as well as moments of joy) in America's mining communities in ...
Lee saw photography as a manifestation of our shared humanity. It can freeze a moment in time, revealing an emotion that bonds us all: love, fear, hope, sadness, joy, anger, surprise.
So let’s open today slowly, with Russell Lee’s mid-century photography of America’s poor workers, pulled together by Perkins. Here, Lee captures a group of coal miners just before going ...
American photographer Russell Lee (1903–86). This image is available from the United States Library of Congress’s Prints and Photographs division under the digital ID fsa.8d26773.
Russell works as a school librarian in Lee’s Summit, ... He’s published a book on photography techniques and his pictures are also marketed by the stock photography company Getty Images.
Beatles photographer Ethan Russell talks ‘Get Back’ book, the Rolling Stones, and The Who As a young photographer, Russell lucked into an assignment for John Lennon and Yoko Ono and would ...
It’s no wonder Kimora Lee Simmons wanted to get rid of this book. One of the biggest deals at the Simmons family’s ongoing hip-hop yard sale today was a book from the divorced couple’s ...
RUSSELL LEE, 83, some of whose photographs of poor people of the 1930s are in the Museum of Modern Art in New York, died Thursday. As one of five photographers hired by the Farm Security ...
Russell Lee has returned with a new collection of spooky stories to make your blood curdle. Fans of the True Singapore Ghost Stories (TSGS) series can now get their hands on his latest work, the ...
Opening night of New York Fashion Week started with unforeseen pouring rain. The clouds cleared and the heavens opened up in time, though, for the book launch of photographer Russell James ...
Beatles photographer Ethan Russell talks ‘Get Back’ book, the Rolling Stones, and The Who As a young photographer, Russell lucked into an assignment for John Lennon and Yoko Ono and would ...
When a young Ethan Russell saw Michelangelo Antonioni’s 1966 iconic film “Blow-Up,” he decided he wanted to be a photographer. After his father bought him a camera, Russell began exploring ...