My Favourite Photography Books

In Books, Study the Masters by David31 Comments

I’m often asked for recommendations about photography books. Not, mind you, books about photography, but books of photographs. Here are my current favourites. They of course represent my own tastes and lean heavily toward black and white documentary photographs, but you can learn from all photography, and I think black and white images are simpler, allowing us (often) to get to the heart of them more quickly.

So here in no particular order are the books that are currently on my own shelves that I turn to over and over again, and that I would (and do) recommend to my friends and students. Some of the links below are Amazon affiliate links. Any of these would be a good choice as a gift for the photographer in your life (you, for example) and will last much longer, and have much more impact on your photography, than any of the needless plastic stuff out there. The best money I ever spend is on books. No idea which one to pick, just choose one – they’re all amazing.

Ernst Haas, Color Correction

Elliott Erwitt, Personal Best

Elliott Erwitt, Home Around the World

Saul Leiter, Early Color

Saul Leiter, Early Black and White

Josef Koudelka, Nationality Doubtful

Josef Koudelka, Gypsies

Josef Koudelka – Exiles

Helen Levitt

Raghu Rai’s India

Magnum Contact Sheets

Sebastiao Salgado – Workers

Sebastiao Salgado – Genesis

Constantine Manos – American Colour

Alex Webb, The Suffering of Light

Saul Leiter, In My Room

Born To Ice, Paul Nicklen

Amaze, Cristina Mittermeier

Willy Ronis, The Master Photographers Unpublished Albums

Magnum Contact Sheets (I love this one!)

Anything by Bruce Davidson but this one: Inside Outside is fantastic (and really big!)

While we’re talking about really big collections, this collection of the work of Gordon Parks is amazing (though I am shocked to see how expensive it is now!)

Pilgrims & Nomads, David duChemin. Since this list first came out I published my latest limited edition fine art book, Pilgrims & Nomads, and I’d be remiss if I didn’t include it here. I’m fiercely proud of this book and the 12 years of work it took to complete it. There are only a few of the 500 signed and numbered books left and when they’re gone, there will be no more. Click here to find out more.

Others if you can get them: anything by Fan Ho, Pentti Sammallahti, Sam Abell. These 3 are among my favourite photographers ever.

 

Do you have a favourite photography book (a book of photographs as opposed to books about photography)? I’d love to hear about it! Have you spent time with any of the books above and second my recommendation? I’d love to hear about that too.

 

For the Love of the Photograph,
David.

PS – Want more like this? I send these articles out every two weeks to photographers around the world who want to improve their craft and explore their creativity and I’d love to include you. Tell me where to send it and I’ll send you a copy of my best-selling eBook Make Better Photographs, as well bi-weekly articles, first-glimpse monographs of my new work, and very occasional news of resources to help you keep moving forward in this craft we love.

“Each and every one of your emails inspire and motivate me to want to jump right out of my chair away from my computer and shoot for the love of it . Thank you David.” – Millie Brown

Comments

  1. May I suggest
    1. Joyce Tenneson, “A Life in Photography” (since you have an affinity for mid-20th century—all the rest are 21st century women photographers to add another dimension to your collection)
    2. Sally Mann, “A Thousand Crossings”
    3. Annie Leibovitz, “Wonderland”
    4. Amy Friend, “Dare Alla Luce”
    5. Beth Moon, “Ancient Skies, Ancient Trees”
    6. Susan Burnstine, “Absence of Being”
    7. Aili Markelius, “What happens in the dark”
    8. Kristen Bedford, “Cruise Night”
    9. Brooke Shaden, “Reflection: Exploration of Self”
    10. Cig Harvey, “Blue Violet”
    11. Gulnara Samoilova, “Women Street Photographers”
    12. Ami Vitale, “Panda Love: The Secret Lives of Pandas”

  2. “Karsh Portfolio” by Yousuf Karsh, University of Toronto Press, 1967

    Especially for portrait photographers – impactful portraits of famous people (such as Albert Einstein, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Dame Margot Fonteyn, Yuri Alexeyevich Gagarin, Ernest Hemingway, Sir Edmund Hillary, Pope John XXIII, Lyndon Baines Johnson, Helen Keller, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev, Martin Luther King Jr, Sir Laurence Olivier, Pablo Picasso, and many more.

  3. Cool! I’ve read the Gypsies already. What I love about “Gypsies” is the soul, emotion, and the story-telling that Koudelka does so masterfully. I think that to create a great body of work, one must immerse him/herself with their subjects– getting to really know them on a personal and cultural level.

  4. David – we’ve chatted of course about shooting and such privately – my background being in photojournalism and documentary photography.

    I have a deep love for b/w doc work but for color, nothing speaks both powerfully and subtly than William Albert Allard’s body of work. His book “The Photographic Essay” hearkens back to simpler times – and the images he created shooting Kodachrome 25 & 64 in some of the most marginal lighting conditions speaks prominently about being patient and waiting/watching for those moments to capture.

    Leica rangefinders, fast primes, a brick of film… go shoot.

  5. Thank you for the list, and your perspective. Until now, I’ve ordered “books about photography.” And I’ve been shooting for over a decade.

    I look forward to changing my 2018 mindset.

  6. I have a couple I really love.

    One I found in a bookstore in London on the sale table. It cost me a fiver and is a firm favourite. It’s called Der Garten (The Garden) by Arno Fischer and is a book of Polaroids from his gardens. It’s a reminder to me that the everyday can be exquisite.

    The second one is called Gardening At Night and is by Cig Harvey. There’s something very evocative about her work and the titles of her images. I can’t quite put my finger on it, but I don’t really feel like I need to.

    There’s another book I gifted to a friend a few years ago that is all photographs of the ocean. I wish I’d bought myself a copy at the same time as I can’t find it now. I just remember how the photographs made me feel. But, I have the ocean on my doorstep so I can visit it for the IRL experience instead of thumbing through the pages of a book.

  7. Thanks for the list. And can I say that the Soul of the Camera is one of my faves. I am remiss in communicating that I wrote a glowing review on Amazon but because I purchased a signed copy for myself for the big 5 0 it did not have a record of my purchase to verify so my review was not published! Happy 2018!

  8. As someone with a modest collection, let me add a few:

    1) Tim Carpenter, Local Objects
    2) Ernesto Bazan, his Cuban Trilogy — Bazan Cuba, Al Campo, and Isla (and his new family book, before you grow up)
    3) Todd Hido Lagos
    4) Sally Mann’s Immediate Family
    5) Jason Eskanazi Wonderland

    and I second the recommendtions concerning Kouldelka, oarticularly Gypsies and Exiles; and Trendt Park.

    1. Fred Herzog’s – “Modern Color” is exquisite.
      Lynsey Addario – “Of Love and War”
      Andre Wagner – The Purist
      Rog Walker – Textured Cities
      Max Yavno – The Photography of Max Yavno
      Kwame Brathewaite – Black is Beautiful
      Jill Freedman – Resurrection City
      Wayne F. Miller – Photographs: 1942-1958
      Wayne F. Miller – Chicago’s South Side, 1946-1948

  9. Hi David

    To add another Ernst Haas, ‘The Creation’ is a stunning collection of colour photographs. Also for colour work: Eliot Porter ‘The West’, Shinzo Maeda ‘A Tree, a Blade of Grass’, and J H Lartigue ‘The Autochromes of J H Lartigue’.
    For black and white images: Jill Freedman ‘Circus days’, Ray McSavaney ‘Explorations’ and Paul Caponigro ‘New England Days’.
    Finally a photographer whose career was cut tragically short – Dean Brown ‘Photographs of the American Wilderness’.

    Nigel

  10. Great topic!

    I’m also very fond of the two books by S.Salgado that you mentioned (I assume you already saw the documentary ‘Salt of the Earth’…? Adds a whole new dimension to his work). Last week I got his ‘The scent of a dream’ about coffee. A very nice way to more better appreciate one’s daily cup…

    As far as documentary photography goes, on the color side of things I’m also very fond of Steve McCurry. I have his ‘Iconic Images’, his ‘Untold’, and last week got his ‘Afghanistan’. I’m more into black and white, but my project for the coming weeks will be to re-read parts of Michael Freeman’s ‘Color’ from 2005 and then look at McCurry’s pictures again in order to hopefully better understand his approach to colour.

    For landscape I quite like Joe Cornish’s ‘First Light’, a nice combination of gorgeous photographs and short stories about his process and artistic choices.

    Last but not least, I’m still very fond of the very first photography-book that I bought, Le Anh Thai’s “The Poet with a Camera”. I was starting with photography, just loved the title at the time, and still enjoy looking at his photographs once in a while.

    I also greatly enjoy Elliott Erwitt’s humour, but haven’t come around to buying one of his books yet. “Personal Best” is on my wish-list, however. And as far as humorous street photography is concerned, some day I also want to get myself a book by Robert Doisneau.

  11. Hi David,
    Thanks for the recommendations – will have to check them out. I constantly find myself reaching for:
    Jim Brandenburg’s “Chased by the Light”
    Michio Hoshino’s “Hoshino’s Alaska”
    Eliot Porter’s “Intimate Landscapes”
    Dave Bohn’s “The Land and the Silence”
    Nick Brandt’s “A Shadow Falls”

    I’d be curious to hear your thoughts on any non-photography books that inspire you. I find myself drawn to writings of John Burroughs, Sig Olson, Henry Beston, and Richard Nelson for inspiration.

    Have a great Holiday!
    Very respectfully,
    Dan Kehlenbach

  12. These are great! Thanks for posting them. My go to is Intimate Landscapes (Eliot Porter). Such fantastic work.

  13. Hi David…

    Great collection of books. I know some. Don’t recognize others. So, I’ll have a take a look at all of them.

    Personally… I’ve always had an outdoor related photographic bias and thus anything from Galen Rowell & Art Wolfe are favorites. More recent books would have to include “Creative Fight” by Chris Orwig. Makes you think. Ponder. Think some more. And, then go out and create images! I’ve read it twice so far.

    Cheers,
    Mark

  14. My favourite books (so far, with my limited budget, no affiliate links):

    Daido Moriyama: The World through My Eyes

    Trent Parke: Dream Life

    Trent Parke: Minutes to Midnight

    Saul Leiter: Early Color

    Ernst Haas: Color Correction

    Robert Frank: The Americans

    William Klein: New York

    Bruce Davidson: Subway

    Magnum Contact Sheets

    Sebastiao Salgado: Genesis

    Books I ordered lately:

    Koudelka: Koudelka

    Via library:

    Helen Levitt: Helen Levitt

    Koudelka: Making Exiles

  15. I found the photos from The Suffering of Light on the internet a couple of weeks ago and they changed my life. Seriously. It’s like something clicked in me. I bought the book for myself from my husband for Christmas and just received it yesterday. Can’t wait to open it on Xmas day! 😛

  16. One of us is channeling the other persons thoughts. I had just asked for book recommendations in a closed Facebook group on Monday.

  17. Absolutely second your choice of Genesis by Sebastiao Salgado, which is a remarkable opus. He is one of my favourite photographers and highly recommend his Africa and Other Americas books as well, but they are more confronting in their material. Also South Southeast by Steve McCurry, Poles Apart by Galen Rowell and Polar Obsession by Paul Nicklen. And yes on Magnum Contact Sheets as well.

  18. Very nice list there David, I have seen some of them but don’t actually own them, I’ll have to rectify this. A couple that I have acquired recently are:

    Remembering Rhinos
    Remembering Elephants

    Always been a fan of Vincent Munier’s work but I think I’ve previously mentioned this one. Looking at my bookself, I can see

    Eye to Eye by Frans Lanting

    Now I’ll have to get to my local bookstore and browse 🙂

  19. This one is probably out of gamut for the genre that most of your readers engage in but “1/1000th The Sports Photography of Bob Martin” is a wonderful study in color, design, and moment with an artistic bent for a subject that otherwise viewed as documentary. Highly recommended for those who love interpretation of light in all it’s aspects.

  20. And don’t forget “Photographs” by Pete Turner of course. Arthur Meyerson’s book “The Color of Light” is impeccable as is “India” by Eric Meola. Would also recommend getting “ Edge of the Earth” (Art Wolfe), “Wild Africa” (Alex Bernasconi), “Inferno” (James Nachtwey) and right in your backyard, “Zebrato” (Michael Levin). The list keeps growing.

  21. I love “Adventures in Photography” (Hurtig pub 1987) featuring images with interesting anecdotes from contributors Pat Morrow, J. Kraulis, Greg Scott, and Ron Watts. A book that has stood the test of time for me.

  22. Definitely have one… it is the first that taught me a lot… and it is “Within the Frame”…. Got many more of course, but this is the most important one to me… Thank you David!

  23. I’ve always loved your books David – It never hurts to compliment the site owner 😉 (FYI – not really kidding a whole bunch)

    Understanding Exposure by Bryan Peterson taught me how to expose my images creatively. I think reading that took me from making snapshots to making photographs.
    Mastering Black and White Digital Photography by Michael Freeman took my black and white images to another level. I’ve always loved monochrome images but I always just hit “black and white” or dropped the saturation to zero. This book taught me how to I could convert my images to black and white with more impact and match more of the drama of the scene I saw in my mind.

    I have a couple of Joe McNally’s books but I really loved the Hotshoe Diaries. I think this book really made me think of the process of making an image especially when it comes to light. He doesn’t talk about the technical side too much but you do get a glimpse into his thought process. It really inspired me to start doing my own off camera lighting and creating more interesting scenes. In fact, I would say it was largely because of this book that I did a self-portrait a week project because the project began with a desire to learn more about off camera lighting.

    For books that have just flat-out inspired me – Surrational Images by Scott Mutter, One of Yousuf Karsh’s books (it’s name has completely escaped me), Freeman Patterson’s books (I have 4 of them?)

    All of this makes me realise – I have a lot of books I’d like to re-read and I think I should do more of my own photo books. I actually get inspired by my own images sometimes. Imagine that! 🙂

  24. I do not (!) consider myself a phonebook “collector” but somehow I’ve managed to collect a lot of them on my bookshelves (and beyond). There are a ton of small press books that I stumble upon each year. It’s hard to list any favorites, but a couple that immediately come to mind from 2017 are Passage by Linda Foard Roberts, Face to Faith by Samuel Zuder, The Japanese Phonebook by Steidl and Everglades by Lisa Elmaleh. I also just purchased a beautiful copy of Edward Ranney’s Peru folio of photogravure prints from the 90s, buried in a photography bookstore’s file drawers below some old prints. An amazing find!

    I’ll look at phonebooks pretty much daily, just as I read novels.

    I also have many of the ones on your list. I’ll check out the ones that I don’t. I love how on Amazon you can find used copies of older books for pennies on the dollar, that are often in great condition.

  25. Vittorio Sellas ‘Summit’ knocks me out every time I pull it from my bookshelf. I’m never sure if it’s the mountains documented between 1879-1909 or the heavy 19thC kit that does my head in … whatever … this book makes me swoon!

  26. The Suffering of Light by Alex Webb is an incredible book and one that I revisit frequently. It changed my perspective on photography completely the first time I digested it.

    I’ve never checked out Ernst Haas. But a quick look at the link suggests I need to. Thanks for the recommendation!

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