Fotografía de autor

Stephen Green-Armytage

Autor de Extraordinary Chickens

16 Obras 496 Miembros 10 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Stephen Green-Armytage received his master's degree in English from Cambridge University in England. In addition to much advertising and corporate work, he has photographed many well-known politicians, athletes, and other celebrities, and his work has appeared in numerous books and periodicals, mostrar más including Sports Illustrated, Life, Fortune, Smithsonian, Good Housekeeping, and various European magazines mostrar menos

Incluye el nombre: Stephen Green-Armitage

Obras de Stephen Green-Armytage

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Green-Armytage, Stephen
Fecha de nacimiento
1938-03-13
Género
male
Nacionalidad
England
UK
Lugares de residencia
London, England, UK
New York, New York, USA
Educación
Cambridge University
Ocupaciones
photographer
Biografía breve
[from photographer's website]
Stephen always had cameras during his childhood in England. Half way through his university years he decided that photography was the career that he wanted, but being realistic, after graduating he spent a year as a humble studio assistant . Working for three advertising specialists in London, he came to know what it took to be a professional. “You don't always know what there is to learn until you learn it. And then forever you continue to learn, continue to develop the skills that permit you to make correct choices quickly.”

As a young freelance photographer in Britain, Stephen worked on some major advertising campaigns, but then started doing magazine work as well. He found the assignments stimulating. “If magazines did boring stories, they would soon be out of business, so the work was almost always interesting."

At the time, the United States had the best magazines, and when Stephen moved to New York, he immediately started working for Sports Illustrated, which was one of his best clients for three decades. “It was a weekly, so there was always plenty happening, with good editors and a great photo department. I appreciated that they were receptive to good story ideas from writers and photographers.”

He also did assignments for Fortune, Travel & Leisure, The Smithsonian, and some European magazines. He worked for Life Magazine during the period when it was a monthly – some sports, some portraits, but mostly animals, both wild and domestic, birds, mammals and reptiles.

Advertising work in the United States has included assignments for agencies in New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Dallas, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Honolulu.

Miembros

Reseñas

 
Denunciada
Brian-B | 6 reseñas más. | Nov 30, 2022 |
Superb visual dictionary of pigeons
 
Denunciada
Brightman | Oct 19, 2018 |
Absolutely gorgeous, and sufficiently educational for laymen like me. My only question was whether the crazy configurations the birds were bred to could be painful to them, but the birds are, accd. to Green-Armytage, healthy and amiable. Thanks for the rec. Petra X!
 
Denunciada
Cheryl_in_CC_NV | 6 reseñas más. | Jun 6, 2016 |
I bought this book because of a strange encounter with these big and very beautiful birds in Kew Gardens Botanical Gardens in London.

My son and I were walking amid rockeries filled with low-growing shrubs and we noticed a really beautiful golden pheasant. My son, shushing me, moved very slowly up to where he could see it better. There were two birds and they seemed to be having an argument. It became apparent that the birds didn't care how close we got (we got to about 4' and stopped because of their long tail feathers) and continued with their heated discussion. They began to fight! Primary-coloured feather dusters flew up and down with lots of kicking and snipping and displaying of tails, it was very entertaining. But not just for us. Several very drab, brown females we hadn't noticed and several other cock pheasants were all watching the action.

When one of the pheasants had been trounced and walked off dragging his tail, the victor walked up to one of the females who we had been led by literature and documentaries to believe he would now be able to claim, but she turned round and walked off with her friend in the direction the loser had taken.

This reminds me of Elizabeth Marshall Thomas, a wonderful anthropologist and ethologist, who writes not from the accepted 'males are always dominant' viewpoint but from one where there is a lot more subtlety. It was she who enlightened me, in Tribe of Tiger, I think, to the reality of the lion pride.

Two or three lionesses, sisters or cousins and hunters all, are unlikely to be taken over by any wandering male just on his say-so. What does a male lion do most of the time - he babysits is what. A house-husband, babysits and screws the very demanding, multi-orgasmic females. If he isn't any good at those jobs, they have the muscle power to drive him off, and so they do. Yes he defends the pride from males looking to move in, but so do the females when they are without a male and the ones turning up are not to their fancy.

And so it is with pheasants as with lionesses as with women, it's who they fancy, not who fancies them.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
Petra.Xs | Apr 2, 2013 |

También Puede Gustarte

Estadísticas

Obras
16
Miembros
496
Popularidad
#49,831
Valoración
4.2
Reseñas
10
ISBNs
36

Tablas y Gráficos