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Bill Marder has had a photographic
career spanning almost fifty years. He has specialized in all phases
of photography including photographic processes, techniques, and the
history of photography. Starting with his first twin lens reflex camera,
an Argoflex in 1946, Bill Marder won a first class prize of $100. In
Kodakís First Annual National High School Photo Contest. His
photograph was published in the September 1946 issue of Popular Photography
magazine that featured on the next page a tribute to his mentor and
famous photographer, Alfred Stieglitz.
In 1947 he enlisted in the U. S. Army and served as a photographer with
the 19th Infantry Regiment, 24th Division, in Japan. In Japan he won
numerous awards in Army sponsored photo contests. Upon leaving the army,
Bill Marder entered the graphic arts field as a photographer and graphic
artist in color separations. Opening his first business, Mar-Color Inc.
and then Creative Process Inc. during 1950 to 1970. His customers were
national advertising, cosmetic, and fashion agencies. During his years
in his own business invented numerous techniques related to the color
separation field, among which were direct color separations for the
newspaper and advertising fields.
Bill Marder was also among the first to utilize photography as a method
of photographing the advertisers merchandise for producing catalogs
from controlling the beginning to the end of the printing process. In
1970 he moved to Hollywood Florida to manage Dukane Press (owned by
International Silver Company), one of the largest printers with in house
photography in the US Bill Marder worked with the first scanners and
computers to devise control methods for photography and color separations.
He later opened his own business, Creative Color in Ft. Lauderdale,
which is still in existence. During the 1970s Bill Marder entered in
the collecting field of photography, authoring numerous books on the
history of photography. Most of these books were illustrated with his
own photography.
His largest book, Anthony, The Man, The Company, The Cameras, was a
365-page book with over 1000 illustrations and a forward by the noted
historian and photographer Beaumont Newhall. It was co-authored with
his wife and acclaimed in numerous reviews for its superb documentation,
research and photographs on the history of photography. Another book
from 1980, The History and Technique of a New Diffusion Process, utilized
an instant paper negative process that Bill Marder pioneered and developed
along with taking photographs using the large wood cameras from his
collection in sizes 20 x 24 to 8 x 10. Bill Marder has traveled throughout
the United States and Canada, lecturing on the history of photography,
including the George Eastman House in Rochester, New York. In the 1990s
with the entrance of the first digital camera, Bill Marder was among
one of the first to own, learn and develop techniques for use with his
Mac computer.
At the present time in the year 2000, Bill Marder is into his fourth
digital utilizing a Mac computer, Epson printer and now mixes his own
archival inks. He is able to create original photographs on canvas or
other art papers. Marderís works are featured in galleries in
Ocala and Gainesville Florida and has received numerous acclaims for
his technique and mastery of digital photography. Bill Marder has traveled
throughout the world taking original photographs with his digital camera
and has lectured to numerous organizations on the techniques of digital
photography.
For information or to order artwork,
WILLIAM MARDER
7106 S W 115 LOOP
OCALA, FL. 34476
(352) 237-9650
E Mail : Sacrcir@aol.com
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