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“We do not take pictures with our cameras, but with our hearts and minds.”
"A lot of photographers think that if they buy a better camera they’ll be able to take better photographs. A better camera won’t do a thing for you if you don’t have anything in your head or in your heart."
– Arnold Newman
Born March 3, 1918 in New York City. He was raised and attended schools in Atlantic City, NJ and Miami Beach, FL. He studied art under a scholarship at the University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL from 1936-38. He died in New York City on June 6, 2006. Generally acknowledged as the pioneer of the environmental portrait, he is also known for his still life and abstract photography, and he is considered one of the most influential photographers of the 20th Century.
Newman began his career in photography in 1938 working at chain portrait studios in Philadelphia, Baltimore, and West Palm Beach, and immediately began working in abstract and documentary photography on his own. In June 1941, Beaumont Newhall of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) and Alfred Stieglitz “discovered” him, and he was given an exhibit with Ben Rose at the A.D. Gallery in September. There he began working on experimental portraiture, developing an approach that is widely influential in portrait photography today. In June of 1942, he returned home to Miami Beach, FL because of the war. In 1945 his Philadelphia Museum of Art one-man exhibit, Artists Look Like This, attracted nationwide attention. Well established, he moved to New York in 1946 and opened his studio and became a member of the American Society of Magazine Photographers (ASMP.) Newman’s new approach to portraiture began its influence through key publications in America and abroad. Exhibits and purchases of his work by major museums quickly followed. In 1949, he married Augusta Rubenstein, and they had 2 sons, Eric, born 1950, and David, 1952. His wife died in 2009. They are survived by their sons and 4 grandchildren. (http://arnoldnewman.com) undefined