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PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE COLLECTION OF LOIS ZENKEL

7

Herbert Ponting

In the Stable

Estimate
$4,000 - 6,000
$5,080
Lot Details
Oversized gelatin silver print in original oak frame.
1911
16 3/4 x 23 5/8 in. (42.5 x 60 cm)

Further Details

Herbert Ponting

British | B. 1870 D. 1935
Herbert Ponting was a self-taught photographer with a particular interest in stereographs. He turned his hobby into a career in 1900 after winning a world prize for a telephoto of San Francisco Bay, and another work, Mules at a Californian Roundup, that became a centerpiece for Kodak's exhibit at the World Fair in St. Louis. Afterward, he started selling stereograph negatives for publications in European and American magazines and was invited to New York for syndicated magazine work. These documentary photography contributions required him to travel the world extensively.  In 1902 and 1905 he made several trips to Japan and published a highly-acclaimed book on Japanese culture entitled Lotus-land Japan. In 1909 and from 1910 to 1912 he was the photographer for the expeditions to the Antarctic led by Captain R.F. Scott, thus becoming the first official photographer ever to join an Antarctic expedition. The work from his Antarctic series received critical acclaim for their outstanding use of light, composition and dramatic effects of ridges, castle icebergs and polar icebergs.  
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