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elohim
7-Jan-2008, 21:13
Hi all,

I'm looking for Floral/still life photographers
I don't know many of photographers ,
and I 'd like to know more .
need your recommendation...
what's your favorite Floral/still life photographer?
and where I can find their works on internet ?

thanks so much.:)

Capocheny
8-Jan-2008, 02:27
Joyce Tennyson has a couple of books out... you might Google her name for more info.

Graphis also publishes a book called, "Flora" that is very nice.

Cheers

KenM
8-Jan-2008, 06:32
Ray McSaveny - unfortunately, the only way you're going to see his work is in person - his only book doesn't contain any florals.

His floral images are, simply put, amazing.

Jim Becia
8-Jan-2008, 06:56
Check out the work of Tom Baril. (www.tombaril.net) He was Mapplethorpe's printer for years before going out on his own. Lenswork had him in their Sept/Oct. 2007 issue. Jim

Jon Shiu
8-Jan-2008, 09:30
Also check out Mapplethorpe:
http://www.mapplethorpe.org/flowers.html

Jon

Hollis
8-Jan-2008, 09:49
Take a look at Jayne Hinds-Bidaut. She makes some amazing tintypes.

steve simmons
8-Jan-2008, 09:56
Don Worth. His work has been in View Camera and it can be seen at the Photography West Gallery in Carmel.

The Friends of Photography did a monograph back in the 70's and he might have a book out as well.

steve simmons

Bruce Watson
8-Jan-2008, 10:00
Our own Ken Lee (http://www.kenleegallery.com/html/botanicals/botanicals.html) of course.

Then again, I love the work of Imogen Cunningham and the detailed florals that Steichen did early and Strand did late. LF photographers all.

Eric Woodbury
8-Jan-2008, 10:13
http://www.huntingtonwitherill.com/

Both "Botanical Dances" and "Photo Synthesis"

Jim Galli
8-Jan-2008, 10:34
There are some things on my little web site mostly secondary to the different looks that the antique lenses bring to them. Go take a look.

elohim
11-Jan-2008, 05:23
Thanks a lot !!

D. Bryant
11-Jan-2008, 05:39
Cy DeCosse.

Don Bryant

Richard Wasserman
11-Jan-2008, 07:48
I would like to suggest a relatively unknown photographer, Chatles Jones who was born in England in 1866 and lived until 1959. He was a professional gardener and photographed the fruits of his labor as it were. He used glass plates and made very simple, but eloquent photos, really some of the most powerful work in this genre that I have seen.. His work was discovered a few years ago by collector Sean Sexton who was at the Bermondsey antique market in London, and while admiring a trunk opened it to find it full of glass plate negatives. Imagine his surprise! There is not a lot on the web about him, but if you Google "Charles Jones photographer" there are a few sites with some examples. There is a book published in 1998 called "Plant Kingdoms, The Photographs of Charles Jones" with a preface by Alice Waters that is well worth searching for.

panchro-press
11-Jan-2008, 07:59
I'd suggest taking a look at some of the work of Edward Weston and Tina Modotti.

Dick Hilker
11-Jan-2008, 08:01
I'd like to share a few of my own here: http://www.photo.net/photodb/presentation.tcl?presentation_id=288186

Hugo Zhang
11-Jan-2008, 08:07
http://tritranphotography.com/stilllife/
http://www.dfoschisite.com/html/~leaves.htm

Mark Sawyer
14-Jan-2008, 18:28
Marie Cosindas did some very lovely floral still-lifes...

Philippe Grunchec
10-Jul-2009, 06:14
Gail LeBoff in NYC (using artificial flowers).

katie cooke
10-Jul-2009, 12:11
Karl Blossfeldt for plants and flowers, hands down.

Brian Ellis
10-Jul-2009, 13:18
Among living photographers Ray McSavaney is THE MAN when it comes to floral photography. Unfortunately as Ken says, you have to see his floral photographs in person, he hasn't published them anywhere that I know of. I saw them when I attended the Southwest workshop that he and John Sexton have been putting on for years.

Anyone seriously interested in floral photography should buy the book "Floral Photographica - Masterpieces of Flower Photography from 1835 to the Present" by William A. Ewing and published by Thames & Hudson (ISBN 0-500-28348-6). Wonderful writing and commentary and a real revelation of how much more there is to floral photography than just making a nicely lit photograph of a flower. Quite a few by Karl Blossfeldt Katie and you're right, he did some incredible work.