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Displaying items by tag: 1999, Spring Issue

Thank the Photographers

05 April 2000
Published in Special Honors

PhotoMedia thanks all the photographers who generously contributed photography to this issue of the magazine. Other photographers are discussed or quoted in articles throughout the issue.

This Century: Brownies to Digital What comes next?

04 April 1999
Published in Publisher's Message

As we exit the 20th century, computers have become integral for processing virtually all aspects of human intellectual activity, from transacting business to conducting scientific research to facilitating communications and the arts. Little remains untouched by the computer's impact.

It has been intriguing to monitor the evolution of digital technologies within the photography industry, starting with the prototype systems for image capture and output to the current, fully conceived products. The move to digital has given us plenty to write about as photographers and photo users discover new opportunities...

Marita Holdaway: PhotoMedia's 1998 Photography Person of the Year

03 March 1999
Published in Person of the Year

It's not a statement you might expect to hear from a successful businesswoman and arts supporter. But "unexpected" is sort of what Marita Holdaway is all about. With her upbeat, energetic patter and infectious laugh, it's not difficult to picture Holdaway on stage riffing her way through a stand-up routine. In fact, it's easy to imagine her accomplishing just about anything. What Holdaway has accomplished—a reputation for being unusually artist-supportive—is no laughing matter.

Positioned smack in the bustle and noise of First Avenue in downtown Seattle, close enough to bite the ankles of the Seattle Art Museum's Hammering Man, Holdaway's Benham Gallery...

Spring 1999 Cover

15 February 1999
Published in About Our Cover

Photographer John Marshall found this scene in the Glacier Peak Wilderness Area of Washington state. He had taken a shot from the same location 10 years previously without a model, but always wanted to go back and re-create the shot. When he returned, he flagged hikers coming off the trial and traded modeling services for a ride back to where they'd parked their car. Marshall, a father of 1-year-old triplets, got his first 35mm camera when he was 12 and has been professional for 19 years.