Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Kanpai photography representative

Kanpai photography representative

The representative of Kanpai photography is Alfred Stig.

Painting photography is a popular art school in the field of photography at the beginning of the 20th century, which originated in England in the middle of19th century.

Photographers of this school pursue the effect of painting or the realm of "poetic" in their creation. It has gone through three stages: imitation stage; An elegant stage; Art stage. The painter put forward "Raphael of photography, Titian of photography."

Painting photography has experienced a long period of development. The first photographic disc for painting was the British painter Shiloh (1802- 1870). He is good at portrait photography, and his works are rigorous in structure and elegant in shape. 185 1 to 1853 is the growth period of painting photography. 1869, British photographer HP Robinson (1830-1901) published a book about the picturesque effect of photography. He proposed: "A photographer must have rich emotions and in-depth artistic understanding in order to become an excellent photographer.

There is no doubt that the continuous improvement and invention of photography has inspired higher goals, because photography itself, no matter how exquisite and complete, is only a way to higher goals. "It laid a theoretical foundation for the school.

The famous photographers of this school are Thomas Dau Weil Mai Aboy of the United States; Park Jung Su Modal in Britain; Victor Huffman and Bresson of France; Solomon of Germany. There are Louis Dahl Wolff, Peter Starkpier Bruvic and so on.