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Rock, Port Lorne, Nova Scotia

Artist (American, 1890–1976)
Date1919
MediumPlatinum print
DimensionsImage / sheet: 9 15/16 × 7 7/8 inches (25.2 × 20 cm);
Mount: 10 1/16 × 8 inches (25.6 × 20.3 cm)
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineGift of Diann G. Mann, Class of 1966, and Thomas A. Mann, Class of 1964
Terms
  • Photographs
  • Platinum print
  • American
Object number2018.095.007
Label CopyThis is the earliest of Strand’s many photographs of rock formations and arguably the most arresting. He brought his finest tools to bear on this formalist exploration: a newly acquired 8 x 10–inch view camera for the negative, and the luxurious platinum process for the print. Form, texture, tone, and material resolve into a statement on the sensuality of things. For Strand, the critic Clive Bell’s theory of significant form—“lines and colors combined in a particular way, certain forms and relations of forms, [that] stir our aesthetic emotions”—was an invitation to probe photography’s revelatory power. A rock becomes an object of almost mystical beauty. ("Celebrating Reunion at the Johnson," text by Kate Addleman-Frankel and presented at the Johnson Museum May 25-July 28, 2019)
Collections
Dead tree, Vermont
Paul Strand
1945
Spruce and lichen, Maine
Paul Strand
1945 (printed 1960s)
Woods, Maine
Paul Strand
1945 (printed 1960s)
Driftwood, New England
Paul Strand
1928 (printed 1950s)
Tree near the beach, Maine
Paul Strand
1945 (printed late 1960s)
Dark forest, Georgetown, Maine
Paul Strand
1928 (printed 1950s)