Anthony Jones (photographer)
Anthony Jones (born 1962) is an English photographer known for his black and white photos of the urban environment.
Jones was born in London, but moved to East Anglia during his childhood. He uses a Hasselblad medium format camera to make black and white, square, silver-gelatin prints of London and the Art Deco masterpiece, Battersea Power Station. His work has been exhibited at the Victoria and Albert Museum and photo galleries, published in photography magazines, and licensed by the Corbis stock photography library. Jones' self-portrait has been exhibited at the National Portrait Gallery, London.
His work is part of a six-month group exhibition at the Fox Talbot Museum, Lacock Abbey, Wiltshire.
Sources
- Interview with Sophie Martin-Castex
- Interview for Precious Magazine
- Roger Watson on Anthony Jones
- Elizabeth Avedon blog : Anthony Jones
- Canary Wharf snaps help world famous photo museum
gollark: What does that involve then?
gollark: You have significant latency, and encoding video fast enough and for the low bandwidth of most home internet connections means you have rather low quality.
gollark: I mean, it sort of works, but game streaming isn't very good over non-local connections, and not great over those.
gollark: > See the nice thing about virtual desktop is as long as you have a good stable Wi-Fi connection and your computer's on you can play from anywherehahahahahahano.
gollark: Obey your supreme corporate overlord. Submit.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.