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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
(woman) You may remember that a few weeks ago we discussed the question of what photography is. Is it art, or is it a method of reproducing1 images? Do photographs belong in museums or just in our homes? Today I want to talk about a person who tried to make his professional life an answer to such questions.
Alfred Stieglitz went from the United States to Germany to study engineering2. While he was there, he became interested in photography and began to experiment with his camera. He took pictures under conditions that most photographers considered too difficult--- he took them at night, in the rain, and of people and objects reflected in windows. When he returned to the United States he continued these revolutionary efforts. Stieglitz was the first person to photograph skyscrapers3, clouds, and views from an airplane.
What Stieglitz was trying to do in these photographs was what he tried to do throughout his life: make photography an art. He felt that photography could be just as good a form of self-expression as painting or drawing. For Stieglitz, his camera was his brush. While many photographers of the late 1800's and early 1900's thought of their work as a reproduction of identical4 images, Stieglitz saw his as a creative art form. He understood the power of the camera to capture5 the moment. In fact, he never retouched his prints or made copies of them. If he were in this classroom today, I'm sure he'd say, "Well, painters don't normally6 make extra copies of their paintings, do they?"
1 reproducing | |
复制( reproduce的现在分词 ); 重现; 再版; 生殖 | |
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2 engineering | |
n.工程,工程学,管理,操纵 | |
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3 skyscrapers | |
n.摩天大楼 | |
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4 identical | |
adj.完全一样的,完全相同的;同一的 | |
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5 capture | |
vt.捕获,俘获;占领,夺得;n.抓住,捕获 | |
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6 normally | |
adv.正常地,通常地 | |
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