#3,463 in Arts & photography books

Reddit mentions of William Eggleston's Guide

Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 4

We found 4 Reddit mentions of William Eggleston's Guide. Here are the top ones.

William Eggleston's Guide
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    Features:
  • Museum of Modern Art
Specs:
Height9 Inches
Length9 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateOctober 2002
Weight1.6755131912 Pounds
Width0.6 Inches

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Found 4 comments on William Eggleston's Guide:

u/Oliver_Kromwell · 2 pointsr/photography

The MoMA publication from the 2005 Lee Freidlander show

John Szarkowski's book The Photographer's Eye this is not the same as the other book titled "the photographer's eye" by Freidman which is just trash for digital monkeys to get more likes on flickr.

Uncommon Places by Stephen Shore

william eggleston's guide

and a trip (or, if you can, hundreds of trips) to your local art museum.

within these books and experiences lies every lesson in visual awareness, and by extension, photography, you'll ever want.

u/thespeak · 2 pointsr/photography

That's a totally valid question. Nothing prickish at all. This style of deadpan photography can seem boring, gray, dull, pointless, and inaccessible. Using the language of 'fine art' within a photograph (that tricycle in the first image is no accident) can seem pretentious, elitist, and pointless. Between these two barriers, I have no idea how to explain this type of work here. I did find the artists statement interesting. If you are curious, you might be interested in The Photograph as Contemporary Art. The chapter on deadpan photography is particularly relevant to this set of images.

u/FuzzyGorilla · 1 pointr/photography

William Eggleston's Guide, a classic