Fred R. Archer

1946 self-portrait of Fred R. Archer

Fred Robert Archer (December 3, 1889 – April 27, 1963), was an American photographer who collaborated with Ansel Adams to create the Zone System. He was a portrait photographer, specializing early in his career in portraits of Hollywood movie stars. He was associated with the artistic trend in photography known as pictorialism. He later became a photography teacher, and ran his own photography school for many years.

Along with Edward Weston, whose portrait he took, Archer was known as one of the "two big names in art photography in those days out on the west coast".[1] He socialized with and exchanged ideas with many other artists and intellectuals in Los Angeles for decades. He was "without a doubt, the individual with the longest history of participation in the Southern California Salon movement."[2]

  1. ^ Buffum, Jesse H. (1949). "Them was the days – Part III". PSA Journal. 15 (11). Photographic Society of America: 166–169. Retrieved August 28, 2011.
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference Dailey was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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