Sport as a spectacle and photography as a way of recording action have developed together. At the turn of the 20th century, Edward Muybridge was experimenting with photographs of movement. His pictures of a runner feature in every history of photography. Another milestone was when the scientist and photographer Harold Edgerton extended the limits of photographic technology with his study of a drop of milk hitting the surface of a dish. Another advance was the development of miniature cameras in the late 1920s, which made it possible for sports photographers to leave their cumbersome cameras behind.The arrival of television was a significant development in the transmission of sport. Paradoxically, it was of benefit to still photographers. People who watched a sports event on TV, with all its movement and action, valued the still image as a reminder of the game.Looking back, we can see how radically sports photography has changed. Early sports photographers were as interested in the stories behind the sport as in the sport itself. Contemporary sports photography emphasizes the glamour of sport, the colour and the action. But the best sports photographers today do more than simply tell the story of the event, or make a record of it. They capture in a single dramatic moment the real emotions of the participants emotions with which people looking at the photographs can identifyVui lòng để lại nguồn link bài viết: http://tin.tuyensinh247.com/de-thi-thu-dai-hoc-mon-anh-khoi-da1-co-dap-an-nam-2014-p13-c31a16896.html#ixzz3Fj8dRVTW Cảm ơn bạn!
đang được dịch, vui lòng đợi..