Posts Tagged ‘ National Geographic ’

Robert Caputo

January 18, 2011
Robert Caputo

As a 25-year veteran writer and photographer for National Geographic Magazine, Robert Caputo’s work has ranged from documenting traditional cultures and wildlife to covering wars, famines, and political strife. Assignments in Africa, Asia, South and North America included text and stories about the Nile, Congo, and Orinoco Rivers, the rehabilitation of orphan black bear...
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Cary Wolinsky

April 29, 2010
Cary Wolinsky

Cary Wolinsky began working as a photojournalist for the Boston Globe in 1968 while completing a degree in journalism at Boston University’s School of Communications. By 1972, he was providing freelance photographic essays to many national magazines, including Natural History, National Geographic, and Smithsonian. His photographs have been printed in hundreds of publications throughout...
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Why is photography so American?

April 7, 2010

Most Americans think of the twentieth century as essentially an American century, and with good reason. It was (mostly) the period in which the United States grew economically and politically to dominate the world stage. It was also the period when photography blossomed professionally, and as art, and for amateurs, so perhaps we shouldn’t...
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Mike Yamashita

September 21, 2009
Mike Yamashita

Photographer Michael Yamashita Mike Yamashita has combined his dual passions of photography and travel for over 25 years, working most notably for the National Geographic. Specialising in Asia, he has covered Vietnam and the Mekong River, Marco Polo’s journey to China, the Great Wall, the DMZ between North and South Korea, as well as almost...
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