[The Devil
- Black and White Photography
- Photo
- 1874
- 19th Century
- 52.0 x 39.0 cm
- J・ポール・ゲティ美術館
カーレトン・ワトキンス(1829 – 1916)
カーレトン・ワトキンス(1829-1916)による、ヨセミテとアメリカ西部の息をのむような風景写真をご覧ください。彼の象徴的な作品は自然保護運動に影響を与え、自然への認識を形作りました。巨大なマンモスプレート写真の壮大な景色をぜひ発見してください。
J・ポール・ゲティ美術館(Los Angeles, United States of America)
ロサンゼルス丘陵にそびえるJ・ポール・ゲティ美術館。ルネサンスから印象派までのヨーロッパ絵画、古代ギリシャ彫刻など、多様な芸術を無料で鑑賞!ゲティセンターとヴィラで歴史と美を発見。 アメリカ合衆国 ティモシー・ポットツ ロサンゼルス J・ポール・ゲティ美術館 ルネサンスから印象派までのヨーロッパ絵画 美術館 1974 ニューヨーク市 2 J・ポール・ゲティ美術館は主にどこに位置していますか?
A Journey Through the American Sublime
Carleton Watkins’ photograph, capturing a train traversing a dramatic mountainous landscape, is more than a mere record of travel; it is an immersion into the very spirit of the American West at the close of the nineteenth century. The image speaks to a time of monumental transformation—a period where industry, represented by the steel tracks and the passing locomotive, confronted the raw, untamed majesty of nature. Viewing this scene today allows one to feel the grit beneath the wheels and the vast, echoing silence between the peaks.
Technique and Photographic Mastery
As a pioneering work in landscape photography, Watkins employed the albumen silver print process, which allowed for incredible detail while capturing the ephemeral quality of light. The composition itself is breathtakingly balanced. The diagonal thrust of the train tracks pulls the viewer's eye deep into the frame, leading it toward the imposing rock face that dominates the background. Notice the careful inclusion of human elements—the figures near the tracks and the boat nestled in the lower right corner. These details serve not only to establish scale but also to ground the epic sweep of the wilderness with the tangible reality of human endeavor. The monochrome palette strips away the distraction of color, forcing an intense focus on texture, shadow, and the dramatic interplay between light and colossal stone.
Historical Echoes: Manifest Destiny in Print
Dating from 1874, this photograph sits at a fascinating crossroads in American history. It embodies the spirit of expansion—the relentless push westward that defined an era. The presence of both advanced technology (the train) and untouched wilderness speaks to the tension between progress and preservation. Watkins was documenting not just scenery, but the narrative of conquest and connection. For the collector or designer, this piece offers a powerful conversation starter, evoking themes of adventure, industrial might, and the enduring power of the natural world.
Symbolism of Passage and Awe
The journey depicted is inherently symbolic. The train represents human ambition, the linear path carved through chaos. Conversely, the massive rock formations loom as symbols of permanence—the geological time scale dwarfing the fleeting passage of man’s machinery. This juxtaposition creates a profound sense of awe, or the sublime, which art has always sought to capture: that feeling of being simultaneously insignificant before nature's grandeur and yet utterly connected to its power. Reproducing this work allows one to bring that very feeling—that breath-catching moment at the edge of a precipice—into the quiet contemplation of a modern interior.
作品詳細
- 作品名: [The Devil
- 作家: カーレトン・ワトキンス
- 制作年: 1874
- 作品サイズ: 52.0 x 39.0 cm
- 技法: Portrait
- 著作権の状態: パブリックドメイン
- 展示場所: J・ポール・ゲティ美術館
- 技法・素材: Black and White Photography
- 制作時期: Early Career
- コーパスの文脈: pioneering photographic survey work , documenting american west expansion
作品詳細
- Dimensions: 52 x 39 cm
- Medium: Photograph
- Artist: Carleton Watkins
- Subject or theme: Train in mountainous landscape
- Title: The Devil