Dog Dogs

by Elliott Erwitt
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Editorial Reviews

Nearly every one of the 500 black-and-white pictures in this book is a miraculous blend of composition and content, placing photographer Elliott Erwitt right up there with the other postwar, 20th-century masters of moment and meaning. Erwitt writes in his introduction, "This is not a book of dog pictures but of dogs in pictures." It is the photograph that counts, above and beyond its subject, for the photographer of genius. But Erwitt is bound to be called a sentimentalist because he photographs dogs, whom we, in our species-centric way, tend to think of as, well, animals. If Erwitt proves anything, however, it is that our close relationship with these furry fellow travelers is due to mutual resemblance. There is a Native American myth that when the world was created, a great fissure began to split the earth. Humans were caught on one side of the chasm, animals on the other. The dog, however, seeing the gap widen, leaped across to the human side, where he has been ever since. This book captures the pleasures of our loyal, dependent friends, as well as their sorrows and disappointment when they are forced to adapt to human callousness, neglect, or even love. Erwitt sees the dignity of the ankle-high Chihuahua; the anxiety of the homeless hound; the smugness of the adored dachshund, sitting on its chaise longue in the noonday sun; the patience of the pom-pommed poodle; and the gormless joy of a homely but well-loved pug. In his vast range of emotion, and in his easygoing but precise mastery of the abstract elements of composition, Elliott Erwitt has made himself the Cartier-Bresson of the canine world. --Peggy Moorman

Customer Reviews

Do you love dogs? You'll love this book, 2008-06-25
by G. Scott Maclean (Cleveland, OH)
I saw this book in a display case in the San Jose airport a few years ago when I was passing through. It caught my attention because it had a picture of a Scottish Deerhound puppy on the front - and I had a Scottish Deerhound at home, a fairly rare breed.

I bought the book based on that picture!

The book is actually wonderful. It's hundreds and hundreds of black and white pictures taken by the photographer author over almost 40 years, from all over the world. Anytime he saw a dog, he took a picture of it. The result is thousands of pictures of dogs, and he pared them down to a few hundred for this book. It's a great photo essay of dogs and how they fit into peoples' lives in different cultures. See the dog walker with six well-groomed dogs in New York's Central Park, see the little pug hanging around a shop in Brazil hoping for a scrap. It's a perfect coffee-table book, and has been loved by everyone who has seen it at my house.
love, 2007-09-08
by Christopher J. Connor
ive bought like 4 copies of this book to give as gifts...if you like dogs...you'll love this
Some of the greatest dog pictures ever., 2006-07-10
by M. Berzins
Not really a dog portrait book, this book has dogs captured in real settings and sometimes as accessories to the photographic composition. Awesome.
Great Street, also, 2001-12-23
by Will Moore (Bailey, CO)
Not only is this a great book for someone who loves dogs, but it just has some great street photography in general. Personally, I love the mass quanities of photographs. Whenever I look through a book by Cartier-Bresson (or anyone else, for that matter) I always want to see what else he shot besides what ultimately made it into the book. Someday, I hope someone will publish a book of contact sheets, and this is close to doing that.
Great pictures, with dogs, 2001-07-26
by Eileen Galen (USA)
Without a doubt this is a collection of great photos of dogs (820 dogs, in 512 pages - also horses, pigs, cows, cats, and many people) taken over many years and in many countries.

It appears to be wordless; the photographs begin on page one, and there is no text or even a frontispiece before them. If you dig a little, you will find that in fact, buried deep in the middle of this book are two choice bones: an essay, "My Dog Days," by Erwitt, and P. G. Wodehouse's "About My Friends," an appreciation of Elliott Erwitt and of dogs, in Erwitt's words, " easy, uncomplaining targets." Wodehouse traces his own colorful history of dog-owning with warmth and dry humor. Whereas Erwitt writes that "with dogs, as with love affairs, the first and the last are most vivid," Wodehouse seems to vividly remember many more than a couple of dogs.

Wodehouse is convincing, for example, in his assertion that Aberdeen terriers are so "full of the Calvinistic spirit that it is impossible for an ordinary erring human being not to feel ill at ease in their presence." He loves dogs, (some more than others), he doesn't apologize for it, and asks, finally, for "a standing ovation to all dogs," which is precisely what this terrific little book delivers.

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