Charles Allen Clayton III (June 14, 1934 – April 27, 2014) was an American photographer born in Etowah, Tennessee. His 1967 photography series was instrumental in the redesign and expansion of the Food Stamp Program when Senators Edward Kennedy and Joseph Clark used the images in hearings on hunger and malnutrition in the United States. The photographs were later published in the 1969 book Still Hungry in America with text by Robert Coles and a foreword by Kennedy. The book was republished in March 2018 by the University of Georgia Press in partnership with the Southern Foodways Alliance.
One of the most famous photos in country music history was taken on Guy Clark’s porch in 1972 of Clark, wife Susanna Clark , Townes Van Zandt, and Daniel Antopolsky by Clayton.
Early Life
Career
Charles Allen Clayton III (June 14, 1934 – April 27, 2014) was an American photographer born in Etowah, Tennessee. His 1967 photography series was instrumental in the redesign and expansion of the Food Stamp Program when Senators Edward Kennedy and Joseph Clark used the images in hearings on hunger and malnutrition in the United States. The photographs were later published in the 1969 book Still Hungry in America with text by Robert Coles and a foreword by Kennedy. The book was republished in March 2018 by the University of Georgia Press in partnership with the Southern Foodways Alliance.
One of the most famous photos in country music history was taken on Guy Clark’s porch in 1972 of Clark, wife Susanna Clark , Townes Van Zandt, and Daniel Antopolsky by Clayton.
Early Life
Career
Table of Contents
- 1 External links
- 2 References
- 2.1 Clayton al villaggio
- 2.2 Tap the Color AL Clayton
- 2.3 Miss You Most
- 2.4 Wanna Live Long Enough
- 2.5 Music in the Country
- 2.6 The Overlook
- 2.7 Guitars Guns and Girls
- 2.8 Loserville: How Professional Sports Remade Atlanta―and How Atlanta Remade Professional Sports
- 2.9 Darkest Corners of Texas (An Al Quinn Novel Book 7)
- 2.10 The Legend of the Lone Ranger (1952)
External links
References
Last update 2021-08-06