born July 17, 1898, Springfield, Ohio, U.S. died Dec. 9, 1991, Monson, Maine U.S. photographer. She left the American Midwest in 1918 to study in New York City, Paris, and Berlin. In Paris she became an assistant to Man Ray and Eugène Atget. In 1925 she set up her own studio and made portraits of Parisian expatriates, artists, writers, and collectors. She retrieved and catalogued Atget's prints and negatives after his death. In the 1930s she photographed New York's neighbourhoods for the WPA Federal Art Project, documenting its changing architecture; many of the photographs were published in Changing New York (1939)
berenice
الواصلة
Ber·e·ni·ce
النطق
علم أصول الكلمات
() From Ancient Greek (Doric) Βερενίκη (Berenike) "bringer of victory", (Ionic Φερενίκη Pherenike) φέρω (phero) "to bear, to carry, to bring" + νίκη (nike) "victory".