Bill Dane

Bill Dane (a.k.a. Bill Zulpo-Dane), born William Thacher Dane on November 12, 1938, is a North American street photographer best known for pioneering a way to subsidize his public by using photographic postcards.[1][2] He has mailed over 50,000 of his pictures as photo-postcards since 1969.[3][4][5][6][7] As of 2007, Dane's method for making his photographs available shifted from mailing photo-postcards to offering his entire body of work on the internet.[8]

Contents

Life's work

Education

Bill Dane studied Political Science and Art/Painting at the University of California, Berkeley.[4] He graduated with a BA in 1964, and a MA in Art/Painting in 1968. Dane painted for seven years before discovering photography in 1969.[2][9] He worked with Diane Arbus and Lee Friedlander at Hampshire College in the summer of 1971.[10][11]

Photographic career

Bill Dane was recognized by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation with Guggenheim Fellowships in 1973 and 1982.[14] He received Fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1976 and 1977.[15] He used his grants to photograph inside and outside North America. The results of Dane’s explorations have been viewed on his photo-postcards, in exhibitions, catalogs, books, magazines, and over the internet. Unfamiliar Places: A Message From Bill Dane was his seminal exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in 1973.[4][5] While Dane continues as a straight, still photographer working in public places, his pictures have evolved dramatically over time.[13]

Reactions of notable critics

Quotations by Bill Dane

References

  1. ^ a b Swidler, Ann. Introduction to: Bill Dane Photographs Outside and Inside America, Diputacion Provencial De Granada, Spain, 1993
  2. ^ a b c Szarkowski, John - Eugenia Parry Janis and Wendy MacNeil, eds. Photography Within the Humanities, New Hampshire, Addison House, 1977, words: pp.81&85, picture: p.85
  3. ^ Leger, Marc James. Posting the Personal, Some Thoughts on the Postcard Work of Bill Dane Visual & Cultural Studies, University of Rochester, New York, 1995
  4. ^ a b c d Szarkowski, John - "Unfamiliar Places: A Message from Bill Dane," The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1973
  5. ^ a b Collins, James. ARTFORUM, Review of Bill Dane, 12, #7, March 1974, words: pp.76&77, picture: p.76
  6. ^ Green, Jonathan. American Photography: A Critical History 1945 to the Present, New York, Harry N. Abrams, 1984, words: p.180, picture: p.178
  7. ^ a b Edkins, Diana. Landscape & Discovery, Hofstra University, New York, 1973, words: pp.1&3, picture: p.13
  8. ^ A Comprehensive Catalog of Photographer Bill Dane's Work: Bill Dane Photographs Outside Inside
  9. ^ FitzGibbon, John. Death Valley to Phoenix to Santa Fe and the Sangre De Christo, Hope You Like It, Aperture Magazine 94 (Spring 1984), words: pp.22-25, pictures: pp.23-31
  10. ^ a b Bosworth, Patricia. Diane Arbus: A Biography, New York, Knopf, 1984, words: p.304
  11. ^ Hampshire College, Amherst, Massachusetts: Notable Past and Present Faculty
  12. ^ Fraenkel, Jeffrey and Eugenia Parry Janis. The Kiss of Apollo: Photography & Sculpture 1845 to the Present, Fraenkel Gallery and Bedford Arts, San Francisco, 1991, words: p.10, picture: pl.34
  13. ^ a b Baker, Kenneth. "Nothing Escapes His Eye, Not Even Himself," San Francisco Chronicle, Saturday, June 3, 2006
  14. ^ From www.gf.org: All Guggenheim Fellowships
  15. ^ From www.nea.gov: NEA Annual report 1976 and NEA Annual Report 1978
  16. ^ Fraenkel, Jeffrey. Bill Dane's History of the Universe, San Francisco, Fraenkel Gallery, 1992, words: p.Introduction, pictures: pp.1-25
  17. ^ Phillips, Sandra - Yolanda Romero Gomez, Comisaria. "Coleccion Deputacion De Granada," Diputacion Provencial De Granada, Spain, 1995, words: pp.60-61, picture: p.63
  18. ^ Berkson, Bill. ARTFORUM, Review of Bill Dane, 25 # 3, November 1986, words: pp.143-144, picture: p.144
  19. ^ An interview with Bill Dane on August 16, 1991

Further reading

External links