:With a great love for adventure, America's earliest field
photographers crossed great divides, scaled steep ridges and
endured severe weather conditions to document the topographical
features of the frontier landscape for early government survey
expeditions. The work of several of these photographers - William
Henry Jackson, Timothy O'Sullivan, Carleton Watkins, Ansel Adams
and Eliot Porter - is currently featured in the Currier Museum of
Art's exhibition, "American Sublime: Early Photographs of the
Western Frontier" through October 3.
Among the 25 recently acquired images in this exhibition are
prints that document westward expansion with images like Watkins'
1868 print, "The Secret Town Trestle" or O'Sullivan's 1874 print
"Wheeler Survey Shoshone Falls, Snake River Idaho." In addition,
the exhibition features prints by Adams and Porter that celebrate
the majesty of the wilderness, including two photographs offering
contrasting views of Yosemite's Merced River, a mammoth plate
print by Watkins, circa 1870, and a rare Parmelian print by
Adams, 1928.
"Despite the harsh conditions, these photographers set up
makeshift darkrooms in wagons, and carried heavy cameras,
chemicals and large glass plates by mule train over extremely
rough terrain to remote sites," said Kurt Sundstrom, associate
curator at the Currier Museum of Art. "As a result, we have an
extraordinary collection of photography that captures the
spectacular wilderness that shaped many Americans' views of the
potential of the west."
Carleton Watkins, "Merced River," 1870.
The Currier Museum of Art acquired these photographs from
Jonathan Stein, a New Hampshire resident who built this collection
over a period of 25 years. Stein acquired these works in the 1970s,
at a time when collectors were just be-ginning to appreciate the
historic significance and artistic beauty of Nineteenth and early
Twentieth Century photographs. These photographs are in an
exceptional state of preservation and they provide a wonderful
counterpoint to the Currier's collection of Nineteenth and
Twentieth Century landscape paintings, most of which are of the
eastern states.
"The sweeping skies and sublime landscapes poetically captured in
these photographs offers an important insight into a world
untouched by modernization," said Sundstrom. "These dramatic
images truly celebrate the glory of nature and evidence the
extraordinary artistic achievements of the greatest early
American landscape photographers."
The Currier Museum of Art is at 201 Myrtle Way. For
information, 603-669-6144 or www.currier.org.