See what I can see : New Zealand photography for the young and curious

O'Brien, Gregory

Notes
New Zealand photography for the young and curious 111 pages : illustrations (some colour) Summary: Photography was invented in France in 1839 - the year before the Treaty of Waitangi was signed in New Zealand. Within a few years, cameras were charting the life and times of people at this end of the planet. See What I Can See is a celebration of that remarkable, well-travelled, ever-changing invention - the camera - the New Zealand that it captured, and the artists who wielded it. 'See What I Can See' is a book about darkness and light, about careful planning and doing things on the spur of the moment, about the quickness of digital photography and the slowness of old technology. It's a woman driving a tractor and a kid in a Colgate tube, a rock at Ngauruhoe and a Wahine survivor on a cart, it's surfies and selfies and cabbages the size of kings. The book also presents a picture of a country - Aotearoa New Zealand - living its life, dreaming its dreams and taking care of its day-to-day business. (Publisher)
Librarian's Miscellania
1117161443.0 Gregory O'Brien
Location edition Bar Code due date
NON FICTION A04183
Dewey:770.993 a15
call #:OBR
ISBN:9781869408435
pub:2015