(b New York, 14 Jan 1928; d Tijuana, 19 March 1984). American photographer and teacher. He studied painting at City College, City University of New York, under the GI Bill (1947-8), transferring to Columbia University, New York (1948-51), where he joined the students' camera club. He abandoned painting and took up photography, studying under Alexey Brodovitch at the New School for Social Research, New York (1951). In 1952 he joined the Pix photographic agency, working with a 35-mm camera and flash. Aside from commercial assignments, his interest in the human body in movement led him to create a series of photographs at Stillman's Gymnasium, Manhattan. His 'snapshot' aesthetic extended to photographing ballet dancers, showgirls, boxers, and bathers on the beach. From 1954 he was represented by Brackman Associates and his work began appearing in Collier's, Sports Illustrated and Pageant. Influenced by Walker Evans and Robert Frank, he aimed for instinctive, narrative pictures that required little or no caption. In 1955 Winogrand's work was included in the Family of Man photographic exhibition at MOMA, New York. From 1957, when the readership for illustrated magazines waned, he found a new market for his work in advertising. He began c. 1960 to document New York street life in such photographs as Coney Island (1960; Rochester, NY, Int. Mus. Phot.). His first photographic publication The Animals (1969) looked with irony at city dwellers' attitudes to the impotence of caged animals displayed in a zoo (e.g. Untitled (European Brown Bear), 1962; New York, MOMA). From 1969 he taught photography at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and from 1973 at the University of Texas at Austin, while continuing his commitment to photojournalism. He was best known for his anecdotal, often comic photographs of street parades, awards ceremonies, art gallery openings and city night-life, most of which were taken during the 1970s.
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