Pots: Heaped Black Ollas in the Oaxaca Market

Photograph

-

anonymous...

Name/Title

Pots: Heaped Black Ollas in the Oaxaca Market

Entry/Object ID

1986.5.21

Photograph Details

Type of Photograph

Gelatin silver print

Category

American Art, 1800 to 1945, Photographs

Acquisition

Accession

1986.5

Source or Donor

Hardie C. Setzer

Acquisition Method

Gift

Credit Line

Crocker Art Museum, gift of Hardie C. Setzer

Made/Created

Artist

Edward Weston

Date made

1926

Time Period

20th Century

Place

Location

America, North America

Lexicon

Legacy Lexicon

Object Name

Web-Tag-California Artists, Web-Tag-Still life

Dimensions

Height

7-1/2 in

Width

9-1/2 in

Location

Category

Storage

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Website Medium

Label

Gelatin silver print

General Notes

Note Type

Historical Note

Note

Arguably the 20th century’s most influential photographer, Edward Weston’s iconic images include landscapes, portraits, buildings, and small objects like shells, peppers, and nudes. Born in Highland Park, Illinois, he discovered photography in his youth and began his professional career in Southern California in the early 1900s as a surveyor for the railroads. After a brief period of study at the Illinois College of Photography, he returned to Southern California in 1908. Early in his career, he worked in a soft-focus, Pictorialist style and became a founding member of the Camera Pictorialists of Los Angeles. He married the next year and opened his own studio in 1911, supporting his artistic efforts through commercial photography. In the early 1920s, Weston developed a reductive, sharply focused aesthetic. He pursued this new approach during a three-year sojourn in Mexico in the mid-1920s, producing images such as "Pots: Heaped Black Ollas in the Oaxaca Market." Traveling in the company of actress and photographer Tina Modotti, he produced images of her, as well as portraits of other notable artists and writers. He continued making portraits throughout his career. In Mexico, Weston also began to focus on close-up studies of nature, investigating subjects such as vegetables, shells, trees, rocks and clouds. In Carmel, where he lived from 1929 to 1935, he added coastal subjects to his repertoire. He also began a series of nudes. The latter most often depicted Charis Wilson, whom he met in 1934, the year he made this intimate image. He married her three years later.