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  1. Mar 11, 2015 · William A. Ewing is a noted curator, author and museum director, whose 40-year career has been split equally between North America and Europe. Founder of Optica in Montreal in 1972, he moved to the International Center of Photography in New York in 1972, and then to London in 1991, and finally to Switzerland in 1996, where he ran the Musée de ...

  2. William Ewing may refer to: William Lee D. Ewing (1795–1846), U.S. Senator from Illinois. William Maurice Ewing (1906–1974), American geophysicist and oceanographer. Buck Ewing (William Ewing, 1859–1906), American baseball player. Buck Ewing (1920s catcher) (William Monroe Ewing, 1903–1979), American baseball player.

  3. Sep 13, 2018 · Without ever having clicked a shutter, Canada’s William Ewing has earned an international reputation as one of the great luminaries of modern photography. In the more than four decades since opening his first gallery in his native Montreal, the now-74-year old photography expert has created exhibitions, written books – including an ...

  4. William A. Ewing has 57 books on Goodreads with 3168 ratings. William A. Ewings most popular book is The Body: Photographs of the Human Form.

  5. "Through thoughtful essays, Ewing transforms a fantastic collection of photographs into a history of photography itself. With careful arrangement and stylish writing free of...

    • illustrated
    • William A. Ewing
    • Chronicle Books, 1994
  6. thamesandhudson.com › body-photoworks-of-the-humanThe Body - Thames & Hudson

    William A. Ewing is an author, lecturer, curator of photography and museum director. Director of the Musée de l’Elysée in Lausanne from 1996 to 2010, his many publications on photography include The Body, Arnold Newman: Masterclass, Landmark and Lois Greenfield: Moving Still.

  7. EWING, William ("Buck")(b. 17 October 1859 in Hoagland, Ohio; d. 20 October 1906 in Cincinnati, Ohio), baseball catcher whose potent bat and unsurpassed fielding earned him a reputation as one of the finest all-around players of the nineteenth century.