Before visiting the exhibition I was aware that Edward Weston was one of most prominent photographers of the 20th century, but I had only a vague idea of his work.
As noted in the exhibition leaflet, this is "the largest exhibition of his work ever to visit the UK, and it presents a survey of his career".
The exhibition included photographs from various periods including portraits, still life photos, landscapes and nudes. Many of his most famous images were included. I also purchased a small book on Edward Weston published by Taschen which includes many of these photographs. There is a large collection of his photographs available on line at the Centre for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona.
My immediate impression on glancing around the exhibition rooms was the strong composition of many of the images, even though the prints were relatively small by modern standards. In my notes I recorded brief details of several of his less well known photographs where the composition caught my eye.
Sunny corner in an attic:
A man smoking a pipe is resting against a shady area in the bottom right hand side of the frame facing to the right out of the frame. Light streaming from the left hand side of the frame is lighting up an adjoining wall and it is just catching the side of his face. In my sketch of the composition, I thought that the wall against which the figure was leaning was a rectangular block as if on a roof top. Having seen some other images, I guess that the scene is instead the interior of an attic where light is entering from a dormer window or skylight.
The polygonal shapes of the light and shade in the attic are not readily resolved by the eye into a three dimensional structure. The presence of the figure in this abstract scene seems unreal and ungrounded. This seems to be a situation where interest is created by the absence of understandable perspective and a departure from conventional composition.
Grinding maize:
In the centre, a Mexican woman is sitting with her back to us on a light coloured mat. The woman has a dark skirt which is spread out around her on the mat. She is wearing a light coloured blouse which stands out against the dark shadow area surrounding the mat. We cannot see the woman's hands but she is hunched forward so that her head is barely visible. We see just a plait of hair laying between her shoulders.
This is a strong image due to the contrasts between the woman's clothes and the background with dark on light and light against dark. The woman's posture conveys the effort of grinding, without showing her hands working. This is not a dull subject and the relatively symmetrical horizontal composition works well.
Toadstool:
This is a picture of the gills of a toadstool. The toadstool is on its side with the underside facing the lens. The stem is a dark shape in the lower left foreground. The light toned gills on the underside of the toadstool radiate from the top of the stem. The head of the toadstool fills almost all of the frame except for the corners, which are dark.
Similar to some of his other still life photographs of vegetables, the picture celebrates the structure and texture of the toadstool. The light appears to come from below and spreads across the underside of the gills which seem slightly translucent. In one of the later exercises of the course, I will need to attempt something similar to demonstrate the structure and texture of a subject.
Dunes at Oceana:
He took many photographs of dunes at Oceana. The one that I examined at the exhibition was taken from a high viewpoint looking along an undulating ridge of sand. The ridge starts midway up the left hand side of the frame and descends to the bottom right where it curves upwards and snakes away into the distance exiting the frame in the top right hand corner. The light is fairly high in the sky so that the only shadows are to the front and right hand edge of the ridge of sand. Little texture is shown on the flat area of sand behind the ridge.
I find it difficult to analyze why this composition is so effective. It may be the subject's shape has the characteristics of fractal geometry and this is what attracts the viewers eye. It recalls one of the paintings by Jean Miro that I saw at the museum of his work in Barcelona. A single line undulates across a neutral background on a huge canvas that filled a wall of the exhibition room. Despite its simplicity, the composition of this painting appeared to be interesting and balanced.
(This particular painting is not shown on the museum's website unfortunately.)
I also found it interesting that the size of the photographs was quite small. The photograph of Dunes at Oceana was about 25 cms by 20 cms. One of the famous nude photographs was only about 10x7 cms. This is significantly less than contemporary photographs e.g. the exhibition of Irving Penn photographs at the National Portrait Gallery.
I read the commentary in the book but these dealt mainly with Edward Weston's significance in the history of photography. I am more interested in his compositional repertoire and techniques.
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