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AE Monthly

AE Reviews

 
Original Photography in Books and Albums from William Reese

A Watkins photograph of Yosemite on the cover of Reese's Art Bulletin 12.


By Michael Stillman

Warning! Notice! On the second page of this review there is a photograph of a most attractive, totally nude young woman. This photograph is a work of art (as is the woman). However, if such things offend you, please do not go to the second page. Read page one in full, but skip the rest. For those who appreciate such images, strictly from an artistic perspective, you may proceed to page two, but only after reading page one in its entirety.

The William Reese Company has issued one of its periodic "Art Bulletins," this one titled Photography Illustrated Books and Albums. This is a fairly short pamphlet, six pages with just ten items. The quantity may not be high, but the quality is. These are ten spectacular items, the highlight of which is their photography.

Item 1 is an album of Yosemite Photographs, by western photographer Carleton F. Watkins. Watkins put together this album of 27 large photographs (12 1/4" x 8" on average) for journalist Albert D. Richardson in 1869. Richardson had written very complimentary articles about Watkins' work in the New York Tribune, so it is likely the latter appreciated the journalist. It is hard for photographs of Yosemite not to be spectacular, and Watkins does not let us down. See the image from Yosemite on the cover of this catalogue to the left (click it to enlarge). Richardson's name and the date are stamped in gilt on the cover. Priced at $195,000.

Item 2 is a huge panorama of Sydney, Australia, over 18 feet long. It is a 360-degree complete sweep of the city, taken on November 12, 1885. $20,000.

Item 3 is a western rarity, Sport Among the Rockies. The Record of a Fishing and Hunting Trip in North-Western Montana. By the Scribe. The scribe was Charles Spencer Francis, and he published this very limited edition work (15 copies) in Troy, New York, in 1889. It includes mounted photographs of outdoor adventures in Montana, a tent city filled with taverns, ranches, Indian agencies, even Sitting Bull's son. $30,000.

Item 4 is Redwood and Lumbering in California Forests by Edgar Cherry. This 1884 book includes 24 photographs mounted on card stock, designed to prove to skeptical easterners that the redwood trees really were as large as claimed. The purpose was to promote the use of redwood. $14,500.

Item 5 is the photograph referenced at the top of this review. The nude young lady was a prostitute working in Storyville, New Orleans' notorious red-light district. Lying on a couch, apparently in a pose designed to attract business, she was photographed by New Orleans photographer Ernest Bellocq. His name is known, but sadly, hers has been lost. Bellocq somehow managed to gain access to the brothels of Storyville around the turn of the century. He was an amateur photographer, but a well-respected one. He also lived just a block from Storyville, so it was a logical place to visit. What his motives were in taking the pictures is not clear, though he obviously had to have plenty of cooperation from his subjects.

Original Photography in Books and Albums from William Reese

Ernest Bellocq's photo of a lady of the evening from New Orleans' famed Storyville.


Bellocq apparently never printed his photographs. He was content to view them on the glass plates on which they were captured. Nor did he have any seeming plan for them. They went to his only heir, a brother who was, of all things, a priest, when he died in 1949. Most made their way through second-hand shops before finally being discovered later by collectors. This particular photograph, circa 1912, was printed from the glass plate shortly after Bellocq's death. Whatever Bellocq's purpose, there is art in his work, and there is also perhaps the best preserved evidence of what was happening behind the doors of Storyville, where prostitution was legal until the federal government shut it down in 1917. His photographs were the inspiration for the 1978 Brooke Shields/Susan Sarandon film Pretty Baby. As for the lady in the photograph, she would be about 115 today, but her youth will ever be preserved in Bellocq's photograph. $30,000.

Item 6 is the Harvard University class album for 1859. It includes photographs of students, professors, buildings, and the rowing team. Many of those students would have their lives cut short in the upcoming Civil War. $6,000.

Item 7 is an album of 22 original photographs of the city of Puebla, Mexico, shortly after the siege by the French in 1863. The French would succeed in briefly installing the regime of the Emperor Maximilian, but he was overthrown and executed four years later. $60,000.

Item 8 is the second known copy of a collection of 1875 photographs of Montevideo, Uruguay, designed to entice foreign investment. $9,500.

Item 9 is Vischer's Pictorial of California Landscape, Trees, and Forest Scenes. Grand Features of California Scenery, Life, Traffic and Customs. Vischer mounted 163 photographs of his drawings of just about every type of scene in California in this 1870 album. It comes with the text volume of the same name and an 1872 supplement. $27,500.

Item 10 is the photo album compiled in 1874 of the Wheeler survey of the American Southwest. This survey ran from 1871-73, and this album, containing 50 photographic prints, was produced in just 50 copies. Most are in institutional collections or were broken apart long ago. The photographs were taken by Timothy O'Sullivan and William Bell, and include the Grand Canyon, Indian pueblos, and Canyon de Chelly. $225,000.

The William Reese Company may be contacted at www.reeseco.com or 203-789-8081.