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348 RON

Women have had a special relationship with the camera since the advent of photographic technology in the mid-nineteenth century. Photographers celebrated women as their subjects, from intimate family portraits and fashion spreads to artistic photography and nude studies, including Man Ray’s Violon d’Ingres. Lesser known – and lesser studied – is the history of women photographers, who continue to make invaluable contributions to this flourishing art form. A lengthy study with 416 pages and more than 300 illustrations, ‘A History of Women Photographers’ is the only survey of women photographers working in the past three centuries, and it is impressively comprehensive. In this edition author Naomi Rosenblum expands the book’s coverage, including new photographers and fifteen new images. There are several important revisions throughout the text and to the appendix of photographer biographies. Rosenblum also provides a new Afterword, in which she evaluates the influence of rapidly changing digital technology on the field of photography and how women photographers stand in the twenty-first century. ‘A History of Women Photographers’ is a momentous contribution to the study of photography – and an important addition to any shutterbug’s library.

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