1939 Belgium - 2013 Wiscasset, ME. Known for: Photography.
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Liliane De Cock Morgan, a child of World War II Belgium who later became a vital part of the west coast fine photography world and photographic assistant to Ansel Adams, before continuing her career... Read full biography
Liliane De Cock Morgan, a child of World War II Belgium who later became a vital part of the west coast fine photography world and photographic assistant to Ansel Adams, before continuing her career in the New York area, died quietly in her home in Wiscasset, Maine, due to complications from... Read full biography
Liliane De Cock Morgan, a child of World War II Belgium who later became a vital part of the west coast fine photography world and photographic assistant to Ansel Adams, before continuing her career in the New York area, died quietly in her home in Wiscasset, Maine, due to complications from cancer, on May 25th. She was 73 and had moved to Maine in 2010 from Ridgefield, Connecticut. In Morgan’s 1973 monograph, Ansel Adams described her photography in the introduction: “De Cock presents to us a... Read full biography
Liliane De Cock Morgan, a child of World War II Belgium who later became a vital part of the west coast fine photography world and photographic assistant to Ansel Adams, before continuing her career in the New York area, died quietly in her home in Wiscasset, Maine, due to complications from cancer, on May 25th. She was 73 and had moved to Maine in 2010 from Ridgefield, Connecticut. In Morgan’s 1973 monograph, Ansel Adams described her photography in the introduction: “De Cock presents to us a personal, private world. It is a world of individualistic beauty and intensity. She communicates to all who will respond; she relates to no particular pattern of concept or execution. Hers is fine photography—and what more can one say?” Their... Read full biography
Liliane De Cock Morgan, a child of World War II Belgium who later became a vital part of the west coast fine photography world and photographic assistant to Ansel Adams, before continuing her career in the New York area, died quietly in her home in Wiscasset, Maine, due to complications from cancer, on May 25th. She was 73 and had moved to Maine in 2010 from Ridgefield, Connecticut. In Morgan’s 1973 monograph, Ansel Adams described her photography in the introduction: “De Cock presents to us a personal, private world. It is a world of individualistic beauty and intensity. She communicates to all who will respond; she relates to no particular pattern of concept or execution. Hers is fine photography—and what more can one say?” Their association had begun a decade earlier when photographer Brett Weston had recommended Morgan for a short-term position spotting... Read full biography