Skip to main content

Warm up Angelo

1.When I look at the pictures that Angelo took of his wife, when she was battling breast cancer, I feel very sad, and just very moved emotionally in general.

2.When he says"They do not define us, they are us." I thought that this is true. Just because she had breast cancer, and she was going through all this changes, it did not make her someone else. She was herself all the way to the end.

3.I think it would take incredible strength to do what Angelo has done by  taking these photos, and honestly I don't think I could do the same. To see someone I love suffer and drift away would already be bad, but to document the suffering of a loved one, would be something else entirely.

4.If I could write angelo a letter, I would tell him what a good job he has done taking these pictures, and also tell him how hard it must of been, and the pain he must have gone through doing this

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Lines

I think this photo displays lines because of the lines in the building it really catches your eye, but the gash in the building's side really draws your attention, that it was something all parell but now it something broken, and out of form.

Lit Mag Photos

Harry Callahan( Black and White Masters Of Photography Pt.2)

Harr Morey Callahan was born in Detroit Michigan, on October 22nd 1912. Callahan studied Chemical engineering, and business at Michigan State University, before taking a job at Chrysler in 1936. Callahan started his career as an amateur photography, and then two years later joined Chrysler's Camera Club in 1938. Another two years later joined Detroit's photo guild in 1941, after a workshop with Ansel Adam. Soon after Callahan devoted his career solely to photography. After gaining a strong enough reputation, he was invited to teach at Chicago's Institute of Design. Callahan's pictures often displayed his wife Eleanor, and just random pedestrians that he found and photographed them. Harry Callahan died, March 15th 1999.