RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘presidential’

Pete Souza talks about life as a presidential photographer

27 Jun

Photojournalist Pete Souza served as the presidential photographer for both Ronald Reagan and Barack Obama. In an interview with Pulitzer Prize-winner Marcia Nighswander at Ohio University, he tells the story behind several of his most noteworthy images from the Obama presidency. Some of his most memorable photos of Obama were taken at the Christ the Reedemer statue in Rio and while crossing the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama.

Souza has a popular Instagram account and will be publishing a book with 300 photos from the eight years he spent in the Obama White House.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Pete Souza talks about life as a presidential photographer

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Here’s the first known photo of a US Presidential Inauguration

20 Jan

When James Buchanan was sworn into office on March 4, 1857, John Wood made history by making the first known photograph of a US Presidential inauguration. 

Wood was hired by Montgomery C. Meigs, an engineer managing the expansion of the US Capitol which added wings for the Senate and House. According to Robert O’Harrow’s The Quartermaster, Meigs was an early days photography enthusiast. As prints became easier and more affordable to produce, he saw the value in using photography to make copies of architectural plans and hired Wood.

For the inaugural photo, Meigs constructed a small stage so that Wood could capture the scene. The crowd of more than 20,000 mostly stood on a platform Meigs had built to hide construction debris. His journal mentions that Wood was able to make the inauguration exposure in 4 seconds, as he had been experimenting with a ‘photography process of great speed,’ referring to the wet collodion process that was being widely adopted at the time. The image that resulted is an albumen print, resulting from a method of making prints that used a substance found in egg whites and table salt to bind photographic chemicals to paper. 

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Here’s the first known photo of a US Presidential Inauguration

Posted in Uncategorized

 

The US Presidential Inauguration will be live-streamed in 360-degrees thanks to Nikon

14 Jan

If your invitation to the Presidential Inauguration got lost in the mail, you’re in luck: USA Today will be live-streaming the event in 360-degrees thanks to some customized Nikon KeyMission 360s. Cameras will be positioned at the Capitol, the National Mall and along the parade route so that viewers can take in the whole event. It will all be broadcast on USA Today’s YouTube channel. For a truly immersive experience, you’ll be able to use the YouTube app with your VR goggles.

The Inauguration live-stream is part of USA Today’s ‘VRtually There’ platform. Its range of VR content varies from strolls through Yosemite to a casual swim with sharks in Oahu. To be honest, we didn’t think anyone would come up with a cheesier name than KeyMission, but ‘VRtually There’ might take the prize.

The Inaugration festivities begin at 9:30am ET on January 20th.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on The US Presidential Inauguration will be live-streamed in 360-degrees thanks to Nikon

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Presidential Graveyard: 43 Colossal Statues Crumble in a Field

26 Mar

[ By Steph in Destinations & Sights & Travel. ]

Drone footage of abandoned president statues

Nearly every single President of the United States, from George Washington through George W. Bush, sits in a dead field in Virginia, some with the tops of their heads blown off or streaks of dirt streaming down their cheeks, looking rather war-torn. Stark white and silent, they wait for what will likely be their ultimate fate: total destruction. The 43 crumbling statues were saved from demolition after the closure of Presidents Park in Williamsburg, Virginia in 2010, and now drone footage has captured them in their current state of purgatory.

Screen Shot 2016-03-25 at 8.28.20 AM

Screen Shot 2016-03-25 at 8.51.30 AM

A man named Howard Hankins was reportedly tasked with destroying the statues when the park shut down after six years in operation, and couldn’t bear to go through with it. He had them moved – at a cost of $ 50,000 – to his farm in the small town of Croaker, about ten miles away. Most of the damage to the twenty-foot-tall statues was sustained during the move. The field is private property and not open to visitors, but Hankins did allow one drone operator access to take this stunning video.

Screen Shot 2016-03-25 at 8.28.27 AM

Weighing up to 20,000 pounds each, the statues were a challenge to relocate. The tops of the their heads had to be cracked so a crane could hook onto the metal frame inside each one to move them, and some sustained neck damage as they were lifted. Once in place, they continued to peel and crack. Ronald Reagan bears the scars of being hit by lightning.

Screen Shot 2016-03-25 at 8.33.38 AM

Their presence in the field is a bit eerie, especially when the landscape is icy, as captured by photographer David Ogden of Abandoned Earth. It’s hard not to see them in a post-apocalyptic light, imagining them crumbling to dust as a symbol of a culture destined to fall – our version of the ruins of Rome. But at this rate, it doesn’t seem like they’ll be around much longer. An attempt to raise funds to preserve them hasn’t mustered any more enthusiasm than the Presidents Park did when it was a tourist attraction tucked behind a motel, too far from Williamsburg’s more popular sights.

Share on Facebook





[ By Steph in Destinations & Sights & Travel. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Presidential Graveyard: 43 Colossal Statues Crumble in a Field

Posted in Creativity

 

White House photographer on presidential Instagramming

07 Aug

Screen_Shot_2013-08-06_at_12.00.08_PM.png

As the official White House photographer, Pete Souza gets more access to the President than any other professional photographer. Souza is no stranger to photographic social media, either. His images are regularly posted on the White House’s Flickr stream, where the Obama administration has been giving insight into the daily lives of the first family since the inauguration in 2009, and he recently joined Instagram. Time recently interviewed Souza about his work, and you can read more at our sister site, connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on White House photographer on presidential Instagramming

Posted in Uncategorized