Anthony Jones (photographer)
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For another photographer named Anthony Jones, see Tony Ray-Jones (1941–72)
Anthony Jones (born in 1962) is a British photographer known for his black and white portrait photos of the urban environment.
Jones was born in London, but moved to East Anglia during his childhood. He uses a Hasselblad medium format camera to make black and white, square, silver-gelatin prints of the urban environment, London, and the Art Deco masterpiece, Battersea Power Station. His work has been exhibited at the Victoria and Albert Museum other photo galleries, published in photography magazines, and Jones' work is also held in corporate collections. Corbis stock photography library licenses his work. Jones' self-portrait has been exhibited at the National Portrait Gallery, London.
[edit] Sources
- Interview with Sophie Martin-Castex
- Anthony Jones talks about "Once We Were Africans" (BBC article)
- Interview for Precious Magazine
- Article on Madison Avenue Journal about marketing