Miss Brenda Putnam

Photograph

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anonymous...

Name/Title

Miss Brenda Putnam

Entry/Object ID

1980.7.1

Photograph Details

Type of Photograph

Platinum print

Category

American Art, 1800 to 1945

Acquisition

Accession

1980.7

Credit Line

Crocker Art Museum, gift of Dr. Robert L. and Mrs. Sansa O'Connor Alexander

Source (if not Accessioned)

Robert L. Alexander, Sansa O'Connor Alexander

Made/Created

Artist

Laura Gilpin

Date made

1918

Time Period

20th Century

Place

Location

America, North America

Lexicon

Legacy Lexicon

Object Name

Web-Tag-People

Dimensions

Height

9-3/4 in

Width

8 in

Location

Category

Storage

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Website Medium

Label

Platinum print

General Notes

Note

User Text: Laura Gilpen figures among the earliest American women to successfully develop an artistic and professional career as a photographer. Raised in and around Colorado Springs, Colorado, but largely educated in Eastern boarding schools, Gilpen was the oldest daughter of an early Colorado settler. Her first camera was a Kodak Brownie she received as a gift for her twelfth birthday. Two years later, she traveled to New York City with her mother who had her sit for a portrait with leading photographer Gertrude Käsebier. The experience made a strong impression. In 1916, after deciding to seek formal training, Gilpen heeded Käsebier’s suggestion that the young artist move to New York City to attend the school of photographer Clarence H. White. Gilpen, then in her early twenties, shared a city apartment with three other young women, all artists, one of whom was the sitter for this 1921 portrait, sculptor Brenda Putnam. In 1918, Gilpen returned to Colorado Springs and by 1921 was serving as the instructor of photography at the recently formed Broadmoor Academy of Art. Gilpen’s portraits, particularly her platinum prints, were especially popular for their soft tonalities, use of natural light, and the photographer’s emphasis on capturing each sitter’s personality; all of these qualities are evident in this portrait of a lifelong friend. Later in her career, the artist turned to making dramatic studies of the western landscape. Info Page Comments: See curators notes for biographical information on Brenda Putnam. Date given in monograph, Laura Gilpen: An Enduring Grace, for this print is 1921.