This third volume in Skira's History of Photography series serves as a
major reference in the field of photography. The third volume
(1941-1980) of the Skira History of Photography series considers the
years signed by the revolution of color that marked the start of a
radical change in the very nature of amateur photography. At the same
time, through photojournalism, photography became a mirror of society
and a tool for attempts to change it. This monograph traces the
historical evolution of photography, focusing on artists such as Helen
Levitt, Weegee, Robert Doisneau, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Josef Sudek,
William Klein, Robert Frank, Richard Avedon, Shomei Tomatsu, William
Eugene Smith, Gerhard Richter, Bernhard and Hilla Becher, Ugo Mulas, Ed
Ruscha, and Larry Clark, just to name a few. The essays provide an
in-depth discussion of some of the primary themes of the historical
period: the evolution of documentary photography between 1950 and 1980,
the color revolution, and the relationship between photography and
conceptual art.