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Martin Schoeller “When I got the job to shoot him, I thought of him [as] the quintessential New Yorker. On the other hand, he’s also this uber-famous person.
Martin Schoeller has shot close-up portraits of presidents, movie stars, and billionaire entrepreneurs. For the past six months, his subjects have had a lower profile but are no less compelling ...
Martin Schoeller is perhaps best known for his celebrity portraiture—beautiful, tight portraits of well-known figures from Paris Hilton to Bill Clinton, images that provide intimate views of ...
For the past three months, photographer Martin Schoeller—known for his tight portraits of President Barack Obama, Jay-Z, and anyone else you’ve heard of—has been posting pictures of homeless ...
Portraits of Holocaust survivors, shot by Martin Schoeller for the 75th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz death camp in German-occupied Poland.
In his portrait series of gold-medal hopefuls for TIME’s 2012 Olympics special issue, Martin Schoeller shows three U.S. team members—gymnast Gabby Douglas, runner Lolo Jones and swimmer Ryan ...
When Martin Schoeller was sent to the White House to photograph president Bill Clinton in 2000 for the New Yorker, he knew exactly the shot he wanted: the Commander-in-Chief playing golf in the ...
Go behind the scenes of photographer Martin Schoeller's portrait shoot of this remarkable dog of war.
Admired for his close-up head shots of celebrities and influential leaders that sparked a different take on portrait photography since the late 1990s, Martin Schoeller also photographs lesser ...
Martin Schoeller’s new book, Portraits, a 15-year retrospective of his modern portrait photography, is further evidence of the long-lasting power of the photographic portrait that began 175 ...
The subjects on this week’s TIME cover aren’t models in pose. Jamie Lynne Grumet, photographed by Martin Schoeller with her 3-year-old son, is a mother from Los Angeles who subscribes to ...
At the Boca Raton Museum of Art, entering the small alcove devoted to “Martin Schoeller: Close Up” can, at once, be an unsettling experience. With near-microscopic detail, five-foot-tall ...
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