Naomi Rosenblum

Rosenblum during FotoArtFestival 2007 in Poland. Photo by Piotr Bieniecki

Naomi Rosenblum (born 1925) is an American historian of photography, best known for A World History of Photography (1984) and A History of Women Photographers (1997).

A World History of Photography was a finalist for the Kraszna-Krausz Foundation Award.

She has written on Adolphe Braun, Lewis Hine, Paul Strand and others for numerous monographs, books and periodicals.

Naomi and Walter Rosenblum were the recipients of the International Center of Photography's Lifetime Achievement Award at the 14th Annual Infinity Awards, May 4, 1998.

Rosenblum's work is archived at the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona in Tucson, Arizona.

North America's Largest Collection of Fine Art Photographs | Center for Creative Photography. (2017, December 23). Retrieved April 12, 2018, from https://ccp.arizona.edu/[1]

Personal

Roseblum married the photographer and teacher Walter Rosenblum.[2]

The Rosenblums are the parents of documentary filmmaker Nina Rosenblum.

In 1977 she and her husband, noted photographer and teacher Walter Rosenblum, were co-curators with Barbara Millstein of “America and Lewis Hine, a retrospective of the work of Lewis Hine at the Brooklyn Museum, New York. In 1980 they were invited by the People’s Republic of China to install this exhibition in Beijing, the first official loan from an American museum to China.

Works

  • 1980 "America and Lewis Hine" Beijing, China
  • A World History of Photography, Abbeville Press, 1984.
  • In : Larry Heinemann, Changing Chicago: a photodocumentary, University of Illinois Press, 1989.
  • In : Therese Thau Heyman, Seeing straight: the f.64 revolution in photography, Publication Information, Oakland Museum, 1992.
  • A History of Women Photographers, Abbeville Press,1994.
  • Documenting a myth: the South as seen by three women photographers, Chansonetta Stanley Emmons, Doris Ulmann, Bayard Wootten, 1910–1940, 1998
  • 1999: "Photo League", FotoEspana, Madrid, Spain
  • A History of Women Photographers, 2nd edition, Abbeville Press, 2000.
  • A History of Women Photographers, 3nd edition, Abbeville Press, 2010.

References

  1. "Clio: Naomi Rosenblum". www.cliohistory.org. Retrieved 2018-04-12.
  2. Naomi Rosenblum


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