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・ Bob Walker (footballer, born 1891)
・ Bob Walker (footballer, born 1912)
・ Bob Walker (footballer, born 1942)
Bob Walker (photographer)
・ Bob Walkup
・ Bob Wall (football administrator)
・ Bob Wall (ice hockey)
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・ Bob Wallace (footballer, born 1893)
・ Bob Wallace (footballer, born 1948)
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Bob Walker (photographer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Bob Walker (photographer)

Robert John Walker (6 January 1952 – 19 September 1992) was a San Francisco, California-based photographer and environmental activist. In an intense period of activism from 1982 to 1992 he was associated with more than a dozen Bay Area conservation organizations and as a photographer for the East Bay Regional Park District. Walker was born in Syracuse, New York and grew up in Youngstown, Ohio. He died in San Francisco of AIDS-related complications, at the age of 40.
==Beginnings==
Walker attended Oberlin College. It was at Oberlin that he made his closest friend, a mutt named ''Dog''. After graduation in 1974 he drove with ''Dog'' across country, entering the San Francisco Bay Area through Altamont Pass whose sensual hills he would note were the cause of his love affair with California.
Walker’s journey as a photographer began when a friend, poet Jim Mitchell, sold Walker his first camera: a Pentax ME. Armed with his new camera, Walker traveled to the East Bay hills to capture the natural beauty of the area. ''"I do think I can take credit for getting him interested in photography, but the East bay Hills he discovered on his own..."''
Walker had one good eye and only partial use of the other. He took many of his photos in low light with very slow film, a technique that resulted in landscapes with great depth of field. He called the afternoon hour at which he took most of his best photos Magic Hour. This time of day allowed Walker to take advantage of the shadows and contrasting light of the sunset. The "San Francisco Bay Guardian" commented that his photos, ''"conjure up the style of the old masters..."''
Walker credited a photo taken in winter 1982 as a pivotal point in his photographic career. One stormy day he was hiking in the rain in his favorite park. The sky was completely covered with dark rain clouds above a pastoral landscape of sensual green hills, with Mt. Diablo in the distance. Seeing the Sun beginning to break through the clouds, he quickly rushed to the top of the ridge and captured the image, ''Winter Storm over Marsh Creek''. He later noted that it was the first time he envisioned a photo before it had been created.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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