Join us for The Photo Society Presents Jim Richardson on May 7, 2024 at 12:00PM ET. This event is free and open to the public thanks to our friends at Epson America. Please feel free to share the link https://tinyurl.com/tpsjim
Jim Richardson’s photographic journey to National Geographic began 60 years ago on a farm in Kansas with a camera his father bought in a pawn shop. He honed his craft for 15 years working for the Topeka Capital-Journal, LIFE, LOOK, Sports Illustrated, Time, Newsweek (and doing documentary books) before his first National Geographic story was published in 1984. During the next 35 years with National Geographic he has photographed more than 50 assignment stories.
Join us for The Photo Society Presents Jim Richardson on May 7, 2024 at 12:00PM ET. This event is free and open to the public thanks to our friends at Epson America. Please feel free to share the link https://tinyurl.com/tpsjim
Jim Richardson’s photographic journey to National Geographic began 60 years ago on a farm in Kansas with a camera his father bought in a pawn shop. He honed his craft for 15 years working for the Topeka Capital-Journal, LIFE, LOOK, Sports Illustrated, Time, Newsweek (and doing documentary books) before his first National Geographic story was published in 1984. During the next 35 years with National Geographic he has photographed more than 50 assignment stories.
In his presentation Jim will explore the wide-ranging subjects (water issues, food and agriculture, light pollution, Scottish culture and landscapes, the King James Bible, volcanic hazards, neolithic archeology) that he brought to life for the magazine. He’ll also share the research and story proposal writing skills he deployed to create compelling visual narratives — and how connecting diverse stories fed into his extended tenure.
For Jim it is all seamlessly connected, one story of photographic exploration that began on the farm and led to the lifetime job of putting pictures to work.
Jim is most proud of two awards: being named the “Photographer’s Photographer” by his National Geographic colleagues and being named “Honored Citizen” by the people of Cuba, Kansas, the small town he as photographed for nearly 50 years.
The talk will be followed with a Question-and-Answer session moderated by TPS Communications Director Alex Snyder. We’ll also be giving away a signed print by Jim Richardson made with Epson technology.
This event is free and open to the public. Please share the link https://tinyurl.com/tpsjim.
In his presentation Jim will explore the wide-ranging subjects (water issues, food and agriculture, light pollution, Scottish culture and landscapes, the King James Bible, volcanic hazards, neolithic archeology) that he brought to life for the magazine. He’ll also share the research and story proposal writing skills he deployed to create compelling visual narratives — and how connecting diverse stories fed into his extended tenure.
For Jim it is all seamlessly connected, one story of photographic exploration that began on the farm and led to the lifetime job of putting pictures to work.
Jim is most proud of two awards: being named the “Photographer’s Photographer” by his National Geographic colleagues and being named “Honored Citizen” by the people of Cuba, Kansas, the small town he as photographed for nearly 50 years.
The talk will be followed with a Question-and-Answer session moderated by TPS Communications Director Alex Snyder. We’ll also be giving away a signed print by Jim Richardson made with Epson technology. This event is free and open to the public. Please share the link https://tinyurl.com/tpsjim.