P.H. EMERSON PUT POETRY INTO PHOTOGRAPHY HE HELPED REVOLUTIONIZE HOW PICTURES WERE VIEWED.Byline: Jim Farber Staff Writer Peter Henry Emerson Peter Henry Emerson (1856–1936) was a Cuban-born photographer. His photographs are early examples of promoting photography as an art form. He is known for taking photographs that displayed natural settings. is the most important and influential 19th-century photographer you've probably never heard of. Born May 13, 1856, in Cuba, the son of a British sugar plantation owner and fourth cousin to Ralph Waldo Emerson, he was briefly in America during the Civil War before moving to England where he attended Cambridge University Cambridge University, at Cambridge, England, one of the oldest English-language universities in the world. Originating in the early 12th cent. (legend places its origin even earlier than that of Oxford Univ. . Emerson was a renowned athlete and outdoorsman, a physician, a self-styled anthropologist, a devoted Darwinian, a prolific writer/lecturer, and a vitriolic critic of those who contradicted his philosophy of photography as "pictorial art." While the equipment Emerson used would have been familiar to the photographers of his day, his theories regarding photography as a means of observing nature were completely unique. And his guiding principle was the action of the human eye. "The image which we receive by the eye," he wrote, "is like a picture minutely and elaborately finished in the center, but only roughly sketched in at the borders. The principal object in the photograph must be fairly sharp. Everything else must be subdued sub·due tr.v. sub·dued, sub·du·ing, sub·dues 1. To conquer and subjugate; vanquish. See Synonyms at defeat. 2. To quiet or bring under control by physical force or persuasion; make tractable. 3. ... slightly out of focus." Today, we take Emerson's "soft focus" approach for granted. But in 1886, when he published his first pioneering book of photographs and anthropological commentary, "Life and Landscapes on the Norfolk Broads," the effect caused quite a stir. When he elaborated upon his ideas in 1889 in an instructional treatise (and aesthetic diatribe di·a·tribe n. A bitter, abusive denunciation. [Latin diatriba, learned discourse, from Greek diatrib ) called "Naturalistic Photography for Students of the Art," the effect, a writer of the day recalled, was like "a bombshell bomb·shell n. 1. An explosive bomb. 2. One that is sensationally shocking, surprising, or amazing. bombshell Noun a shocking or unwelcome surprise Noun 1. dropped in a tea party." Prior to Emerson, the notion of "fine art photography" meant slavishly slav·ish adj. 1. Of or characteristic of a slave or slavery; servile: Her slavish devotion to her job ruled her life. 2. mimicking the sentimental style favored by painters of Victorian England. Emerson called for an entirely new direction in photography based on observations drawn directly from nature, as exemplified in his most famous image, "Gathering Water-Lilies." "Nature," he wrote, "is the great refiner, the poor man's Poor man's is a common slang term used to compare one thing with another. It is not necessarily a derogatory term. It is usually used in a sentence as "X is a poor man's Y", with "X" being the person or thing one is referring to, and "Y" being the superior but similar person or poet and painter." Wandering through the galleries of the Getty Museum, it's nearly impossible not to fall under the subtle spell of Emerson's images, with their somber skies, wafting reeds, glittering streams and stoic "peasants." Perhaps Nancy Newhall Nancy Wynne Newhall (May 9, 1908–July 7, 1974) was an American photography critic. She is best known for writing the text to accompany photographs by Ansel Adams and Edward Weston, but was also a widely published writer on photography, conservation, and American culture. , noted photography critic and author, stated it best: "P.H. Emerson was probably the first true photographer-poet." THE OLD ORDER AND THE NEW: P.H. EMERSON AND PHOTOGRAPHY 1885-1895" Where: Getty Museum, 1200 Getty Center Getty Center, art museum complex in Brentwood, Calif. operated by the J. Paul Getty Trust. It consists of six buildings on 124 acres (50 hectares) located on a spectacular promontory overlooking Los Angeles. Drive, Brentwood. When: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday and Sundays 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday; through July 8. Tickets: Free. $8 for parking. Call (310) 440-7300 or go to www.getty.edu. CAPTION(S): 3 photos Photo: (1) THE HAYSEL, 1887 (2) THE HAUNT OF THE PIKE, 1886 (3) GATHERING WATER-LILIES, 1886 |
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