À propos
Le projet Four Corners permet d'inclure des informations spécifiques dans chacune des photographies aux quatre coins, où le lecteur intéressé peut l'explorer. Cette contextualisation accrue renforce à la fois la paternité du photographe et la crédibilité de l'image.
Le projet a été conçu puis mené à terme par Fred Ritchin. Il a présenté publiquement l’idée, puis a montré comment cela pourrait fonctionner dans un discours prononcé devant le World Press Photo à Amsterdam lors de la cérémonie de remise des prix 2004.
La programmation initiale a été réalisée par l'Open Lab de l'Université de Newcastle sous la direction de Jonathan Worth. Le projet Four Corners a reçu le soutien du International Center of Photography et de la World Press Photo Foundation, en particulier de David Campbell, et a bénéficié de l’aide ponctuelle de Super Uber au Brésil.
L’interface finale a été conçue et développée par Corey Tegeler avec par des étudiants du international of Photography. Perri Hoffmann a dirigé la création du projet et a contribué de manière décisive à la conception de Four Corners et aux tests utilisateur postérieurs à son développement.Le logiciel est open source et gratuit utilisation par le public.
Fred Ritchin
Fred Ritchin, who first proposed the Four Corners idea in 2004 as keynote speaker at the annual World Press Photo Awards Ceremony in Amsterdam, is Dean Emeritus of the School at the International Center of Photography. Previously he was Professor of Photography and Imaging at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, where he also taught in the Interactive Telecommunications Program (1991-2014).
Ritchin created the first multimedia version of the New York Times in 1994-95. The website that he then created for the New York Times on the Web with photographer Gilles Peress in 1996, “Bosnia: Uncertain Paths to Peace,” was nominated by the New York Times for a Pulitzer Prize in Public Service, but immediately rejected by the Pulitzer Committee because it was not on paper.
Ritchin has written three books on the future of imaging: In Our Own Image: The Coming Revolution in Photography (Aperture, 1990), After Photography (W. W. Norton, 2008), and Bending the Frame: Photojournalism, Documentary, and the Citizen (Aperture, 2013). His 1984 piece for the New York Times Magazine, “Photography’s New Bag of Tricks,” was the first major article on the potential impacts of the digital revolution on photography and related imaging. He has also co-authored and contributed essays to several dozen books.
In 1999 Ritchin co-founded PixelPress, an online publication experimenting with new methods of storytelling, and collaborating with humanitarian organizations such as UNICEF, WHO, UNFPA, Crimes of War, and others on media projects including books, exhibitions, and Web sites promoting human rights. Previously he was picture editor of the New York Times Magazine, executive editor of Camera Arts magazine (Ziff-Davis), and founding director of the Photojournalism and Documentary Photography one-year full-time educational program at the International Center of Photography. He was recently given the John Long Award in Ethics by the National Press Photographers’ Association for his contributions to ethical behaviors in photojournalism.