Michael Edward "Ed" Ross (October 27, 1965 - July 30, 2016) was an American tintype photographer and lawyer. His photography work spanned 27 years. His last six years were devoted exclusively to wet-plate photography. His focus as an artist was primarily on nude portraits and landscape photography.
Video Ed Ross
History
Ross was born in Ukiah, California to Bill and Dorothy Ross and raised in Davis, California. He attended Jesuit High School in UC San Diego, studied at the London School of Economics, and the UC Hastings School of Law. He worked as senior legal counsel for the Apple computer company in Cupertino, California.
Maps Ed Ross
Photography
Ross had taken photographs for 27 years, and during the last eight years of his life used the Collodion process or wet-plates for his work. Ross worked with three different cameras: a half-plate box-style camera made by Ty Guillory, an 8×10 bellows-style camera made by Black Art Woodcraft, and a 16×20 Chamonix. He used 'period' lenses, manufactured between 1850 and 1900, by Dallmeyer, Voigtlander, and Ross.
Recognition
Ross' work has been featured in Quite Frankly, juxtapoz.com and 62nd floor Art Zine issue #9. Ross was one of the few tintype photographers in the world. His talent and unique approach to photography earned him a respectable place among the most creative and innovative photographers.
Death
Ross died on July 30, 2016, in a motorcycle accident on a mountain road near Yosemite National Park while on his way to photograph one of his favorite subjects, the Half Dome in Yosemite Valley.
See also
- Collodion process
- Tintype
- Nude (art)
- Depictions of nudity
- Nude photography
References
External links
- Official Website
- Ed Ross on Facebook
- Ed Ross Photography on Tumblr
- BLUR MAGAZINE: WET PLATE blur-magazine.com
- 62nd Floor zine "The Past Lives On Forever"
- Wetplate Photography with Ed Ross gavinhignight.com
- Raw Beauty Gallery - Wet Plates rawbeauty.nl
- Ed Ross on Enkil espaƱol
- Dark Beauty Magazine
- Liberator Unzipped
- Blogspot
Source of the article : Wikipedia