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Jerome
Albertini
Annalisa
Janette Beckman
Teri Bloom
Chris Buck
Danny Clinch
Michel Comte
Mo Daoud
Matthew Dean
Peter Dokus
Sante D'orazio
George Dubose
Roger Erickson
Davis Factor
Jesse Frohman
Marc Hom
T. Hopkins
Gregory Jackson
Hassan Jarane
Eric Johnson
Jeffrey Kane
David Katzenstein
Kevin Knight
David LaChapelle
Christian Lantry
Michael Lavine
Robert Lewis
Dana Lixenberg
Anthony Mandler
Jonathan Mannion
Clay Patrick McBride
Ernie Paniccioli
Adam Port
Ebet Roberts
Matthew Salacuse
Michael Schreiber
Mark Seliger
Jamel Shabazz
Piotr Sikora
Atsuko Tanaka
Max Vadukul
Nitin Vadukul
Cesar Vera
Christian Witkin
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Ernie Paniccioli

Regarded
by most to be the premier Hip-Hop photographer in America,"
Paniccioli first made his foray into the culture in 1973 when he began
capturing the ever-present graffiti art dominating New York City.
Armed with a 35 millimeter camera, Paniccioli has recorded the entire
evolution of Hip-Hop, much in the same way Gordon Parks recorded the
Civil Rights Movement, or akin to the manner in which James Van Der
Zee, the documentary photographer of Harlem in the 1920s, met the
energy and spirit of his times head-on with his picture-making. And
like Edward S. Curtis monumental prints of the Native peoples
of North America 100 years ago, Paniccioli, himself a Native American,
has found a beauty and resiliency in a community often ignored by
mainstream society.
From Grandmaster Flash at the Roxy (a popular Manhattan nightclub
of the late 1970s and early 1980s), to the athletic dance moves of
the legendary Rock Steady Crew, to the fresh faces of Queen Latifah,
Tupac Shakur, The Notorious B.I.G., Eminem, and Lauryn Hill, Paniccioli
has been in the forefront documenting the greatest cultural movement
since Rock and Roll in the 1950s. A true renaissance man, Paniccioli
is also a painter, public speaker, and historian. He has also photographed
a number of popular figures beyond Hip-Hop, such as Frank Sinatra;
Liza Minelli; John F. Kennedy, Jr.; Britney
Spears; and Ricky Martin, to name a few.
World: A Global Anthology of the New Black Literature, features some
of the best writers of the Hip-Hop generation.
The chief photographer for Word Up! magazine since 1989, Ernie Paniccioli's
work has also appeared in The New York Times, Time, Newsweek, Life,
Rolling Stone, Spin, Vibe, Ebony, and The Source. His television credits
include MTV and VH1. Ernie Paniccioli's images can also be found in
numerous books, including: Turn Up The Volume: A Celebration of Black
Music (UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History), Rap and Hip-Hop: The
Voice of A Generation (The Rosen Publishing Group), and Lift Every
Voice and Sing (Random House). He was chosen by KRS1 to be the spokesman
for The Temple Of Hip Hop at The United Nations at the Hip Hop Peace
Treaty conference in May of 2001 and the moderator at the Meeting
Of The Minds at the Zulu Nation 27th Anniversary. His photography
was on huge outside display at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for
The Roots, Rhymes and Rage exhibit.
<
< Click on an Immortal Photographer.
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