Garry Winogrand Essays

  • Garry Winogrand

    1463 Words  | 3 Pages

    Garry Winogrand Gary Winogrand’s photography career began when a friend introduced him to it in 1948 while taking painting classes at Columbia University. After Winogrand’s first exposure to the darkroom, he abandoned painting and “never looked back.” Winogrand became extremely emerged in photography and felt that nothing else in life mattered. He dropped out of college to pursue his passion. Earning an average of ninety cents per week, he had a difficult yet determined beginning. Winogrand

  • Two Pieces showing Photography as Art

    1363 Words  | 3 Pages

    Analysis of: American Legion Convention-Dallas: Street photography by Garry Winogrand Skip, Philadelphia: A photograph by George Krause Art is such an eternal concept and part of our lives. It lives on through generations, transcending many periods, and can speak through many mediums. Art is a way of expression, when nothing else can capture, but is something that can be interpreted in many ways. I chose photography—that which best portrays mankind, in that it hides nothing and only shows

  • Garry Winogrand: The Godfather of Street Photography

    1323 Words  | 3 Pages

    photographers such as Garry Winogrand, who turned photography into an art. Winogrand symbolized a new generation of photographers on the rise in the mid-1960s known as “street photographers.” While each photo is of simple, everyday life, they each contain an individual message and meaning much deeper than what was seen through the lens. His impact is still being felt in photography today and has been identified as a turning point in American photographic history. Garry Winogrand was born on January

  • Deep Blue Essay

    833 Words  | 2 Pages

    matches. This book, a technological milestone, is not just a triumph, but a rare, pivotal watershed. The book offers a detailed account of IBM's Deep Blue chess program, the people who created it, and its historic battles with World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov. It establishes the point in history when mankind's exciting new tool, the computer, came of age and competed with its human creators in the ultimate intellectual competition: a game of chess. The text examines the progress made by the creators

  • Mind Sports

    509 Words  | 2 Pages

    and time. A study done at Temple University found that chess drains energy at a rate that compares to football. Some of the best chess players in history regarded athletic training as an essential part of success in the game. Both Bobby Fischer and Garry Kasparov lifted weights. They used other physical conditioning techniques as well, not necessarily for their health, but because of the amount of stamina the game requires at high levels of competition. It is not uncommon for a professional player

  • Silence and the Notion of the Commons

    571 Words  | 2 Pages

    The title of this essay “Silence and the Notion of the Commons” gives the same idea of people as programmable and unprogrammable similar to the idea seen in the Matrix. Whereas programmable people, who are the commons, are the people inside the matrix they are also known as the sheep, the people that believe in everything they are told. The unprogrammable people, who are the silence, are the people outside of the matrix. Ursula Franklin uses a variety of techniques in order for the audience to fully

  • Becoming A Grandmaster In Malcom Gladwell's 'Outliers'

    557 Words  | 2 Pages

    Although my desire to become a grandmaster has not waned, I still believe my goal is attainable despite some changes in my time table. My goal was to achieve a national title by the time I turned 16 and grandmaster by 20, all without compromising my studies or failing to maintain a somewhat normal social life. My primary aim has not yet been accomplished, but my chess understanding has improved significantly. I have progressed from a“Class E”to an“Expert”level player, but not without a few lessons

  • Smarter than You Think: How Technology Is Changing Our Minds for the Better by Clive Thompson

    625 Words  | 2 Pages

    flew past me. The book is a whirlwind of interesting ideas, captivating people, and fascinating thoughts on how technology is changing how we work and think. Smarter than You Think starts out with a cautionary tale of how in 1997 world chess champion Garry Kasparov was beaten by Deep Blue, an I.B.M. supercomputer. This was a considered a milestone in artificial intelligence. If a computer could easily defeat a chess champion, what would happen to the game and its players? A year after Kasparov was defeated

  • mind vs machine

    567 Words  | 2 Pages

    In 1792 Mary Wollstonecraft in her work A Vindication of the Rights of Woman posed the question, "In what does man's pre-eminence over the brute creation consist?" She answers, "In reason and virtue by which mankind can attain a degree of knowledge." Today, no one would argue that man and woman are not intellectually equal, or that humans have a superior intellectual capacity over the brute creation, but what would they say about humankind versus the machine? We have always felt ourselves superior

  • Mike Wells Famine In Uganda

    1729 Words  | 4 Pages

    Hannah Park Ms Bradley Honors English 12 24th May 2017 Title The year is 1980. Missionary and Catholic monk Mike Wells makes his way to the Karamoja region of Uganda, Africa where the natives are facing great suffering. This is not a new or unusual occurrence, but this time famine has struck hard. Wells captures the pain and hardship in a photo of a missionary’s healthy, strong, and lively hand holding the malnourished hand of a starving Ugandan boy. This photo spoke louder than any news story could

  • News Report of the Chess Match of Anand Aganist Carlsen

    679 Words  | 2 Pages

    “I’ve learnt from Anand but I think I showed him in a way that although he has taught me many things in the past, now it’s probably my turn to teach him.” These were Magnus Carlsen’s exact words after defeating Vishwanathan Anand in the FIDE World Chess Championship Match that was recently held in Chennai. The final scoreline read Carlsen-6.5 : Anand-3.5. Carlsen won 3 games and 7 games were drawn. Anand couldn’t muster a single victory. But these statistics do not in any way capture the true persona

  • Game Playing and Artificial Intelligence

    1552 Words  | 4 Pages

    Game Playing and Artificial Intelligence Abstract Since the inception of the field of Artificial Intelligence (AI), game playing has had a key role. Likewise, AI has been an integral part of modern computer games. This collaboration of academic and commercial research and development into AI has yielded vast amounts of crossover technology. Academic research problems have become or influenced commercial games and the money gained from the commercial applications of AI have helped advance academic

  • American Red Cross Essay

    870 Words  | 2 Pages

    I was four or five years old when I first noticed people with ‘plus red’ sign logo helping the victims of nearby town that have been devastated by vicious fire. Everyone present there were oblivious of who these ‘angel’ like people are and who sent them here. This has never happened in extreme places like that before. Like many superheroes in science fiction movies, they came from nowhere and started getting their hands dirty. With them, they brought food, water and medical aids, etc. At that young

  • Should Photojournalism or Documentary Photography Be Considred Art?

    2303 Words  | 5 Pages

    "A photograph is not merely a substitute for a glance. It is a sharpened vision. It is the revelation of new and important facts." ("Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History."). Sid Grossman, a Photo League photographer expressed this sentiment, summarizing the role photography had on America in the 1940’s and 50’s. During this era, photojournalism climaxed, causing photographers to join the bandwagon or react against it. The question of whether photography can be art was settled a long time ago. Most

  • Street Photography Essay

    822 Words  | 2 Pages

    Photographs of the street are as photography itself is old. Cameras were set on balconies or aimed them out of windows by the earliest practitioners, which took advantage of natural light in capturing the life in the streets below (Paul McDonough, 2010). As camera became more portable and smaller, the photographers took them into the streets and created a photography type. Casually spontaneous or carefully staged by turns, in nature documentary or seemingly without subject as diverse as the streets