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September
13, 1997 to November 30, 1997
A
Poetic Vision:
The Photographs of Anne Brigman
Presented
by the Art Department
The soft-focus,
evocative images of California's foremost Pictorialist photographer
were the subject of an exhibition at the Oakland Museum of California.
A Poetic Vision: The Photographs of Anne Brigman was on view September
13 through November 30, 1997. The exhibition of 75 images spans
the artist's career from the turn of the century to the mid-1930s.
This is the first solo exhibition to be drawn from four major collections
of her work -- those held by the Oakland Museum, George Eastman
House, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the private collection
of Michael G. Wilson. A Poetic Vision was organized by the Santa
Barbara Museum of Art. The Oakland Museum is the last stop on the
show's national tour.
| Brigman's
favorite subject was the female nude, often posed outdoors in
dramatic landscapes to suggest an intimate, immensely powerful
connection to the natural world. |
The Pictorialists,
inspired by Alfred Stieglitz of New York and painters of the Tonalist
school, are known for the poetic quality of their images. Working
to bring photography into the ealm of fine arts, they were the first
to use their cameras as an artistic medium, often manipulating negatives
in the dark room to create soft, subjective effects. Brigman joined
this movement in 1902 when she had her first show in the second
San Francisco Salon, an annual group show organized by the California
Camera Club. The following year, she became the first and only photographer
west of the Mississippi Rive r-- and the only woman -- to be admitted
by Stieglitz into his Photo-Secession, a hand-picked, internationally
renowned society of avant-garde photographers. As a California photographer,
she was revered by her West Coast colleagues, influencing a whole
generation of prominent photographers that includes Edward Weston
and Imogen Cunningham.
Brigman's favorite
subject was the female nude, often posed outdoors in dramatic landscapes
to suggest an intimate, immensely powerful connection to the natural
world. Back in her Oakland studio, Brigman then used pencils, paint,
chemicals and even etching tools directly on her negatives to achieve
her aesthetic effects. She often combined negatives, sandwiching
them together in her enlarger so that images were superimposed on
one another. Favorite clouds, rock outcroppings or trees would appear
repeatedly, transcending mere depiction to become subjective elements
in her highly personal vision.
Among her better
known images, The Source, 1908, a gelatin silver print in the Oakland
Museum's collections, evokes the timeless spring of life in a soft-focus
image of a kneeling female nude pouring water from a small vessel.
In another image, Untitled (Self-Portrait), n.d., also in the museum's
collection, Brigman sits half reclining in a flowing robe, her gaze
contemplatively focused on a large glass ball that reflects the
glowing windows of her studio.
Later images
in the exhibition reflect Brigman's continuing evolution as an artist.
In 1929 she moved to Long Beach, California, and turned her attention
to the beaches and industry of Los Angeles County. Many of these
lesser-known images, a striking contrast to her Pictorialist work,
were shown in the exhibition for the first time.
Funding for
A Poetic Vision: The Photographs of Anne Brigman was provided by
the National Endowment for the Arts, the Santa Barbara Museum of
Art Women's Board, and the Dana and Albert R. Broccoli Foundation.
The exhibition's Oakland Museum of California venue was supported
by the members of the Oakland Museum of California.
For more photography at OMCA visit our photography
resource page.

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