Imogen Cunningham - Important Photographs from the Collection of Dr. Anthony Terrana New York Tuesday, April 2, 2013 | Phillips

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  • Provenance

    Private Collection, San Francisco
    Robert Klein Gallery, Boston

  • Literature

    Lorenz, Imogen Cunningham: Flora, pl. 61

  • Catalogue Essay

    Imogen Cunningham’s photographic interest in flora seems a natural progression from her studies at the University of Washington where she studied chemistry and wrote
    her thesis on the chemical process of photography. She also helped to produce slides for the botany department, which, with the help of magnifcation, brought her into
    direct contact with the smallest details of nature. It was here that botany first became a source of endless fascination for Cunningham and she consistently returned to the subject throughout her impressive career.

    Initially, Cunningham incorporated flora into her commissioned portraits as a way to imbue ambiance into the scene. Eventually, however, she isolated it entirely, endeavoring to explore the beauty and rhythm inherent to the natural world. While Cunningham’s photographs include both exterior and interior images of flora,
    her studio shots, as seen in Calla with Leaf, circa 1930, have come to defne this body of work. Here, a single white lily is isolated against a stark background as strong
    lighting highlights the flower's outline and subtle gradation in shade. Cunningham photographed the flower in its prime so as to eternalize its feeting beauty. Her work thus reminds us of the fragility of her subject and, by extension, the natural world around us.

    As two of the founding members of Group f/64, which advocated for the Modernist aesthetic, Imogen Cunningham and Edward Weston both championed the transition to straight photography and, in looking at the present lot, one cannot escape the dialogue and similarities between the two photographers. While Weston preferred a more abstract approach and Cunningham’s is rooted in her analytical studies as student of science, each artist, through the transformative power of photography, has turned objects as ordinary as shells (lot 14) and lilies, into extraordinary images.

    Cunningham also notes Albert Renger Patzsch and Karl Blossfeldt, both of whom she became familiar with while studying abroad in Germany, as having the most
    significant impact on her evolution as a photographer. Like Cunningham, Blossfeldt approached his floral studies from a similar background in science and with his magnifying camera was able to capture his subjects in detail undetectable to the human eye. Inspired by Blossfeldt’s keen and patient observation, Cunningham diligently studied her subject at its most basic form. In so doing, she likewise elevated minute details of nature to the status of the great architecture and sweeping landscapes that
    had captured photographers’ lens since the early days of photography.

IMPORTANT PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE COLLECTION OF DR. ANTHONY TERRANA

15

Calla with leaf

circa 1930
Gelatin silver print.
9 3/8 x 7 1/2 in. (23.8 x 19.1 cm)
Signed in pencil on the mount; printed title 'Calla Lilly' on the artist's 'Mills College, California' label affixed to the reverse of the mount.

Estimate
$80,000 - 120,000 

Sold for $110,500

Contact Specialist
Vanessa Kramer Hallett
Worldwide Head of Photographs
vhallett@phillips.com
+ 1 212 940 1245

Important Photographs from the Collection of Dr. Anthony Terrana

2 & 3 April 2013
New York