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Richard Misrach, Chemical Weapons Storage, Wendover Air Base, 1989. Chromogenic print, 9.5 x 12.5 inches, 24.1 x 31.8 cm. Signed, Titled and Dated on recto, edition 98/110 on verso. Richard Misrach is ...
Richard Misrach, Untitled 1139-03, ... When he was satisfied with an image, it was burned with lasers onto photographic paper that then went through a chemical developing process.
Fascinating Infographics And Gorgeous Photos Document Our Deadly Chemical Industry The book Petrochemical America documents what’s happened to the part of the Mississippi River that is now known ...
Gain insight into the auction performance of Misrach Richard . Track the change in total sales value, performance of lots against estimate and compare the artist's sale price according to the artwork ...
Photographer Richard Misrach revisits one of the most industrial areas of the United States ... Edgard, Louisiana, 1998 Richard Misrach Holy Rosary Cemetery and Dow Chemical Corporation (Union ...
Misrach photographed the magazines on site, both the covers and inside pages. Seventeen 20-by-24- and 30-by-40-inch color prints from this project are on view at Catherine Edelman Gallery in the ...
Richard Misrach was born in 1949 in Los Angeles. At the University of California, Berkeley, he majored in mathematics, then psychology. Misrach postponed graduate study in psychology to pursue ...
Richard Misrach, age 62, is, to my eye, the most interesting and original American photographer of his generation. His work runs parallel to that of Thomas Struth and Andreas Gursky, two German ...
Photographer Richard Misrach spent nearly four years visiting the Mexican-American border with his camera. He would drive for days across the desert, from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of ...
Image: 9.5 x 12 in. (24.13 x 30.48 cm.) A pioneer of color photography since the 1970s, Richard Misrach (American, b. 1949) is known for his large-scale landscapes and investigations into human ...
Richard Misrach, Untitled 1139-03, ... When he was satisfied with an image, it was burned with lasers onto photographic paper that then went through a chemical developing process.
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