Webography
Artists
Andrea Zittel
Contemporary artist Andrea Zittel’s A-Z
Web
site.
Curtis Collection
Features The Curtis Collection, the
largest and
most extensive collection of Copper Photogravure Plates
ever produced.
These Copper Photogravure Plates represent the life work
of Edward
Sheriff Curtis and his massive documentation of Native
Americans,
"The North America Indian."
Diego Rivera Web Museum
This Web site has images of Rivera’s
famous
murals.
FaheyKlein
Gallery
Images of photojournalist James
Nachtwey throughout
the world.
Giuseppe
Arcimboldo: Portraits
One of the most bizarre and distinctive
painters
in the whole of art history, Giuseppe Arcimboldo
(1527-1593) owes
his reputation to the series of composite portraits of
heads made
up of a variety of objects, both natural and man-made.
Island
of Freedom
Abstract self-portraits of Van Gogh,
Renoir,
Picasso and many other famous artists.
John
Paul Caponigro
Conversation between John Paul
Caponigro and
James Nachtwey that appeared in Camera Arts magazine in
June/July
2000.
Library
of Congress
Extended article and images on Edward
Curtis
written by Gerald Vizenor
Professor, American Studies, University of California,
Berkeley
in
October, 2000.
Library
of Congress
Selected images and descriptions of
artist Edward
Curtis.
Life
and Art of Giuseppe Arcimboldo
This Web site includes a biography of
Arcimboldo
and a gallery of his artwork with descriptions.
Mixed
Greens
Images of contemporary art with
biographies of
the artists. Create an online collection.
PBS’s
Educational Contemporary
Art Series
Has a specific link to Zittel where you can view
videos
excerpted
from the series online.
PBS
Online
A conversational interview with James
Nachtwey
regarding the book “Inferno” that details his work as
a war photojournalist during the period 1990-2000.
PBS
Series: American Masters
Web site focuses on the controversial
aspects
of Edward Curtis’ work and features real dialogue between
Curtis and the Native Americans he observed and
photographed.
Woodblock
Prints of Ando Hiroshige
This Web site includes images and
descriptions
of some of Hiroshige’s most important series of prints
(i.e.,
The fifty-three stations of the Tokaido Road and
thirty-six views
of Mount Fugi) as well as reference material about
Hiroshige and
his artwork.


