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P400/T89/N84S Joe Munroe Archives 34 Boxes Standard Inventoly Provenance: The Ohio Historical Society acquired the Joe Munroe Archives from doe Munroe in May 1997. Jennifer Songster processed the photographs, transparencies, and negatives in July and August of 1997. Proper@ rights: The Ohio tlistorical Society owl~tsh e property rights to the collection. Copyrights: Copyrights have not been dedicated to the public. Consideration of the requirements of copyright is the responsibility of the author and publisher. Permission to publish images from the collection must be secured in writing from Joe Munroe during his lifetime. Citation: Researchers are requested to cite collection name, collection number, and the Ohio Historical Society in all footnote and bibiiographic references. The photograph credit must read: Plzotograph by Joe Munroe/Ohro Nlstorrcal Soclety Biographical sketch: Joe Munroe is a photojournalist, film maker, and environmental activist. He began working as a photographer in 1939 at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Mills, Michigan, though he had been involved with photography as a hobby and as a darliroorn technician for several years prlor to that. At Cranbrook, in addition to teaching, he served as the staff photographer, creating images of the faculty, st~~dentasn,d activities of the institution. He left Cranhrook during World War I1 to enlist in the United States' Air Force where he worked as a public relations photographer. After his stint in the military, Munroe was employed by Farm Quurterly Magazine, a new publication based in Cincinnati, Ohio, photographilig farm and rural life subjects. This was an important time in his career and by the 1950s, he had estabiished himself as a premier agricultural photographer. Ultimately working primarily as a freelance photographer, Munroe began expanding his subjects and interests with clients such as Life, National Geogruphic, Time, Fbr-tune, and Ladies Hor~zeJ ournal. Two of his icon images are the L$e picture assignment from i 959 of twenty-one young men stuffed into a phone booth on a California coliege campus and the 1969 Farm Quarterly cover of the two nuzzling piglets which circulated internationally as a poster. In 1942, while at Cranbrook Academy, he also made his first film: an abstract, black and white film in which lights and shapes move with contemporary jazz music. Me resumed film making in the 1960s for corporations s~rcha s Pioneer I-LiBred international and for public broadcasting. Elis film career also coincided with his interest in rafting the river3 of the western United States. While malting two of his films about the Grand Canyon, Showcase ojthe Ages and Dare the
Object Description
Title | P 400 Joe Munroe Archives |
Subject |
Munroe, Joe, 1917- Photography |
Description | This item is a finding aid or inventory to an Ohio History Connection collection or series. Finding aids are descriptive access tools that provide more complete information about a collection than you will find in the online catalog record. For more information on the collection and to view its contents, contact the Ohio History Connection. |
Creator | Joe Munroe (Photographer) |
Collection | Ohio History Connection Finding Aids Collection |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
File Name | P400_Munroe.pdf |
File Size | 2397396 Bytes |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full Text | P400/T89/N84S Joe Munroe Archives 34 Boxes Standard Inventoly Provenance: The Ohio Historical Society acquired the Joe Munroe Archives from doe Munroe in May 1997. Jennifer Songster processed the photographs, transparencies, and negatives in July and August of 1997. Proper@ rights: The Ohio tlistorical Society owl~tsh e property rights to the collection. Copyrights: Copyrights have not been dedicated to the public. Consideration of the requirements of copyright is the responsibility of the author and publisher. Permission to publish images from the collection must be secured in writing from Joe Munroe during his lifetime. Citation: Researchers are requested to cite collection name, collection number, and the Ohio Historical Society in all footnote and bibiiographic references. The photograph credit must read: Plzotograph by Joe Munroe/Ohro Nlstorrcal Soclety Biographical sketch: Joe Munroe is a photojournalist, film maker, and environmental activist. He began working as a photographer in 1939 at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Mills, Michigan, though he had been involved with photography as a hobby and as a darliroorn technician for several years prlor to that. At Cranbrook, in addition to teaching, he served as the staff photographer, creating images of the faculty, st~~dentasn,d activities of the institution. He left Cranhrook during World War I1 to enlist in the United States' Air Force where he worked as a public relations photographer. After his stint in the military, Munroe was employed by Farm Quurterly Magazine, a new publication based in Cincinnati, Ohio, photographilig farm and rural life subjects. This was an important time in his career and by the 1950s, he had estabiished himself as a premier agricultural photographer. Ultimately working primarily as a freelance photographer, Munroe began expanding his subjects and interests with clients such as Life, National Geogruphic, Time, Fbr-tune, and Ladies Hor~zeJ ournal. Two of his icon images are the L$e picture assignment from i 959 of twenty-one young men stuffed into a phone booth on a California coliege campus and the 1969 Farm Quarterly cover of the two nuzzling piglets which circulated internationally as a poster. In 1942, while at Cranbrook Academy, he also made his first film: an abstract, black and white film in which lights and shapes move with contemporary jazz music. Me resumed film making in the 1960s for corporations s~rcha s Pioneer I-LiBred international and for public broadcasting. Elis film career also coincided with his interest in rafting the river3 of the western United States. While malting two of his films about the Grand Canyon, Showcase ojthe Ages and Dare the |