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  1. 4 de mar. de 2016 · The voracious eye of Sam Wagstaff The American collector amassed some 30,000 photographs, helping to establish the medium’s status in the art world The Great Wave, Sète (c1857), by Gustave Le ...

  2. 5 de sept. de 2013 · Although I had known Sam Wagstaff for years, my contact with Robert Mapplethorpe was minimal, no more than an acquaintanceship, so I was surprised when he asked for me to write this article, ...

  3. 4 de dic. de 2020 · Before coming to Purdue, Professor Wagstaff taught at the Universities of Rochester, Illinois, and Georgia. He spent a year at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. His research interests are in the areas of cryptography, parallel computation, and analysis of algorithms, especially number theoretic algorithms.

  4. 31 de ene. de 2018 · On the last day of the festival there was a gathering at Lucien’s home attended by Robert and Sam Wagstaff. Robert spotted Teresa in the crowd and motioned to her that it was time to take pictures. They began an escape up to the empty third floor apartment when Sam decided to follow.

  5. 19 de oct. de 2007 · Wagstaff was Mapplethorpe’s ardent champion and, in some people’s eyes, his inventor. Whatever the power dynamics between them (one commentator asserts that Mapplethorpe coldly used his mentor ...

  6. 16 de abr. de 2020 · Yale-educated and born with a silver spoon in his mouth, Sam Wagstaff’s transformation from innovative museum curator to Robert Mapplethorpe’s lover and patron is intensively probed in Black White + Gray. During the heady years of the 1970s and 1980s, the New York City art scene was abuzz with a new spirit, and Mapplethorpe would be at the center of it.

  7. 17 de sept. de 2016 · Sam Wagstaff as Curator September 17, 2016 — January 8, 2017 Before Samuel J. Wagstaff Jr. (1921–1987) began amassing his unprecedented private collection of photography in 1973, he had been a groundbreaking museum curator at the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art (1961–68) and at the Detroit Institute of Arts (1968–71).