Part 4 A New Vision (1918-1945) Changes in Photography & Technology, 1918-1945 • Common use of Leica & Contax cameras using 35mm film, with increased sensitivity to light (faster exposure time) • Magnesium flash power replaced by safe flashbulb (1925) • “candid photography” more popular • Electrification of life in general (In the U.S. by 1920, 10 mil cars, 7.5 mil telephones, radios in many homes) • Rotogravure process (printing photos with text) • Motion pictures popular from 1920s; newsreels shown before feature films from 1935 on Mass Media and photography (1918-1945) • Newspapers and magazines becoming main sources of photographers’ income; photo editors influencing public taste • Competition from radios makes visual (photos) more critical to success of newspapers • As modern life becomes more hectic, readers want shorter articles with more photos • Tabloid newspapers (crime, disasters, celebrities) • Dynamic action photos • “candid photography” & behind-the-scenes photography more popular, suggests truth • Photo transmission systems by late 1920s ; improved, cheaper system by Associated Press Wire by 1935 • Fashion and society photos popular Chapter 8 Art and the Mass Media • “The mark of our age is haste, hurry, nervousness…People have no time, indeed they flee the calm of contemplation.” -Edlef Koppen, German editor and radio personality, 1925 • Belief that biologically humans may have a limited capacity to deal with all the media exposure and technological advances • And that media could alter the individual’s perception of the world Martin Munkacsi. Cover of Berliner…. public taste for dynamic , split-second action scenes. Tabloid photographs: Execution of Ruth Snyder, 1928, by Tom Howard’s ankle camera Candid photo at the Hague Conference, March 1930. Erich Salomon. Happened Friday, May 6, 1937; wired to newspapers around the country for the morning paper, May 7.
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