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A unique photographic record of all living Nobel laureatesIn this handsome coffee-table book, photographer Peter Badge captures the likeness of every living Nobel laureate in a lasting black-and-white image -- more than 300 striking portraits in all. Brief biographical sketches accompanying the large-scale photographs pay homage to each laureate's singular contribution to science, literature or world peace. Bringing readers face-to-face with Nelson Mandela, Jimmy Carter, the Dalai Lama, James Watson, Gabriel García Márquez, Toni Morrison, Rita Levi-Montalcini, Linda Buck, and Paul Samuelson among many others, NOBELS offers an intimate and compelling look at well-known honorees as well as lesser-known recipients. A fascinating word/image tableau.
List of contents
Coffee Table book of more than 300 large scale, dutone photographs of Nobel Prize Winners such as Nelson Mandela, the Dalai Lama, John M. Coetzee, Roy J. Glauber, James Watson or Jimmy Carter, each accompanied by a short biography written by Chris Richmond. With an epilogue by Wim Wenders. Includes - as opposed to the former edition - the portraits of the 11 Nobel Laureates of 2007.Accompanying texts:Alfred Nobel - the Will and the Prize (Anders Bárány, Deputy Director of the Nobel Museum, Stockholm)The Lindau Meetings of Nobel Laureates - International Young Scientists Meet Nobel Laureates (Nikolaus Turner, Member of the Board of the "Council for the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings")
About the author
Peter Badge was born in Hamburg, Germany, in 1974, and began his career in photography as a free-lance artist in 1993. In 1995, he moved to Berlin to study Art History and has been living and working there ever since. He initially worked as a free-lance photographer for different magazines, but soon started to develop his own ideas and projects. Choosing portraiture as his main focus, Badge concentrated on noted personalities such as artists and actors, musicians and photographers. Peter Badge has published several books; his work is represented in numerous private and public collections and has been printed in newspapers and magazines.
Summary
A unique photographic record of all living Nobel laureates
In this handsome coffee-table book, photographer Peter Badge captures the likeness of every living Nobel laureate in a lasting black-and-white image -- more than 300 striking portraits in all. Brief biographical sketches accompanying the large-scale photographs pay homage to each laureate's singular contribution to science, literature or world peace. Bringing readers face-to-face with Nelson Mandela, Jimmy Carter, the Dalai Lama, James Watson, Gabriel García Márquez, Toni Morrison, Rita Levi-Montalcini, Linda Buck, and Paul Samuelson among many others, NOBELS offers an intimate and compelling look at well-known honorees as well as lesser-known recipients. A fascinating word/image tableau.
Report
"Daraus entwickelte sich ein Mammutprojekt, ein Buch mit gut 300 Porträts sämtlicher lebender Nobelpreisträger... In ihren Gesichtern kann man zahllose Geschichten über Wissen, Kreativität und Weisheit lesen"Göttinger Tageblatt (16.12.08)"Dieser in seiner Art wohl einzigartige Bildband versammelt fast alle lebenden (und einige inzwischen verstorbene) Nobelpreisträgerinnen und Nobelpreisträger in beeindruckenden Schwarz-Weiß-Fotografien des Fotografen Peter Badge."Physik Journal (12/08)"Die Bilder der größten Genies unseres Planeten sind im Buch "Nobels" (Verlag Wiley-VCH) vereint, mit 138 Euro ist der acht Kilogramm schwere Wälzer kein Schnäppchen. Das große Werk hat günstigere Vorgänger, allerdings nicht mir allen Preisträgern."Berliner Kurier am Sonntag "... opulenter Bildband..."Der Tagesspiegel (7.12.08)"Geniale Gesichter. Der Berliner Peter Badge hat alle noch lebenden Nobelpreisträger fotografiert - und dabei Erstaunliches erlebt."Berliner Morgenpost (7.12.08)"Er brauchte acht Jahre, bis er sie alle hatte. Fast alle... 306 wunderbare, warme Schwarzweiß-Porträts hat Badge nun in dem sieben Kilo schweren Band "Nobels" gesammelt... Das besondere an den Bildern ist die Nähe, die sie vermitteln."Münchner Merkur (4.7.08)