some of my favorite photographs

My visit after Christ­mas to the Getty Cen­ter had as its main des­ti­na­tion an exhibit of pho­tographs by Car­leton Watkins.

Watkins worked all over the West Coast, and was the first per­son to develop an impor­tant body of work on Yosemite. The show con­tained beau­ti­fully pre­served exam­ples of his pho­tographs, includ­ing a few that rank up there among my all-time favorite pho­tographs ever taken.

Carleton Watkins: El Capitan

Car­leton Watkins: El Cap­i­tan, 1860s [ Library of Con­gress ]

More than one per­son has argued that Watkins is the first impor­tant artist to come out of Cal­i­for­nia, regard­less of medium, and I would not argue that point. There’s a poise and still­ness to the work. The images seem to float in their own time and space that extends to infinity.

Even after an hour in a crowded series of gal­leries, the work left me with a sense of still­ness that I still feel, over a week later. (The fact that I’m still on vaca­tion also prob­a­bly has some­thing to do with it…)

watkinsfirstviewofyosemitevalley

Car­leton Watkins: First View of the Yosemite Val­ley from the Mari­posa Trailca. 1866.

In the image to the left, El Cap­i­tan, the light-colored mass of gran­ite to the dis­tance in the left, bal­ances ele­gantly with the bulk of the nearer hill­side on the right. It’s an amaz­ingly for­mal, mod­ern image. I don’t know of any draw­ing, paint­ing or other pho­to­graph from up to this time that looks any­thing like it.

(This is one of two ver­sions of this image taken at the same time from the same van­tage point. I pre­fer the other ver­sion of this image, which is in the Getty show. I wasn’t able to find any­thing on the web to bor­row of either ver­sion, so this quick shot out of one of my books that at least gives you an idea of the image.)

Carleton Watkins: Cape Horn, Columbia River

Car­leton Watkins: Cape Horn, Colum­bia River, 1867 [ National Gallery of Art ]

I had a con­ver­sa­tion with Roy Flukinger, Cura­tor of Pho­tog­ra­phy & Film at the Harry Ran­som Human­i­ties Research Cen­ter at the Uni­ver­sity of Texas at Austin, about nine­teenth cen­tury land­scape pho­tographs. He spoke of a “tran­sub­stan­ti­a­tion” of mat­ter that occurs in many of them, where the long expo­sures and pho­to­graphic tech­niques ren­dered water, air and land to be almost equiv­a­lent mate­ri­als. In the image above, the water and sky and dis­tant moun­tains merge into each other. The cliffs to the right seem to float over the water. At the same time, they seem to fit into the rocks to the left like a key fits into a lock, or the way the shape of Africa reaches across the Atlantic to nes­tle into the empty space of the Caribbean on a map.

Carlton Watkins: Cape Horn near Celilo, 1867

Car­leton Watkins: Cape Horn near Celilo, 1867 [ Met­ro­pol­i­tan Museum of Art ]

The quiet­ness and sense of infi­nite space in this one is phe­nom­e­nal. If your blood pres­sure doesn’t drop ten points after view­ing this image, noth­ing will bring it down!

Dia­logue Among Giants: Car­leton Watkins and the Rise of Pho­tog­ra­phy in Cal­i­for­nia runs until March 1.

January 03 2009 01:34 pm | Categories: artlandscapephotographyplaces | Tags:

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