- Don Worth
-
The childhood of Don Worth (June 2, 1924 – March 18, 2009) on an Iowa farm inspired an abiding love of exotic horticulture, which later became the primary focus of his artistry with the camera. He attended Juilliard as well as the Manhattan School of Music, receiving a graduate degree in piano and composition in 1951. During college, he began photographing and eventually became Ansel Adams' first full-time assistant in 1956. He taught photography at San Francisco State University for thirty years becoming a Professor Emeritus of Art.
In 1974, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship and an appointment from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1980. His photographs are included in countless major museums including the Getty, MOMA and Chicago Art Institute.[citation needed] He was one of the last surviving members of the West Coast school of photography, which included Ansel Adams, Edward and Brett Weston, Imogen Cunningham, Ruth Bernhard and many others.
Worth's large format photographs are marked by an incisive clarity and quiet meditative aura. His images of plants invoke a spiritual iconography while his landscapes often reflect the transformative powers of fog and mist. Don Worth painstakingly created each of his photographs in his darkroom.
"The techniques of photography are not very hard to master. The difficult thing is to become a sensate, cognitive human being. If anyone is going to be good at this thing, they must push themselves to levels of sensory awareness that are beyond the ken of ordinary mortals. Don's photographs are solid evidence that he has scaled these heights. He is a solitary man who has dedicated himself to the search for truth in those living things which can perhaps save us from ourselves, if only we will listen. the messages from this teeming realm are poetically expressed in don's photographs. Look well and learn the secrets of our survival."[1]
"Don Worth's plants are legendary. As a child growing up on a small farm in southern Iowa, he raised exotic plants. Today his house in Mill Valley, California, is a botanical oasis; house and yard overflow with the succulents, orchids and bromeliads that Worth raises. Large glass windows and the profusion of plants and flowers in the airy, light-filled living and dining areas create a synthesis between interior and exterior. The photographer's environment is a functioning metaphor of harmony between man and nature."[2]
"Since the beginning of the twentieth century, photographers have interpreted the world of nature with a passion often approaching the spiritual. The idea that a work of art can provide a visual "equivalent" to how one perceives nature has played an important role in shaping the reverence that many photographers have expressed for the American landscape. As landscape photography evolved beyond prevailing documentary attitudes of the nineteenth century, camera artists such as Don Worth became singularly devoted to exploring the natural world as metaphor. In his quest to capture the exact moment when nature becomes most revealing, Worth's photographs take us far beyond everyday appearances. These moments, between the perception and recognition of what is seen, are precisely visualized through the meditative way in which Worth uses his camera."[3]
Collections
[4] ARIZONA
Center for Creative Photography - Tucson, Arizona
CALIFORNIA
Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
Norton Somon Museum of Art, Pasadena
Oakland Museum of California
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco
San Jose State University, San Jose
Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara
UCLA Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles
FLORIDA
Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg
GEORGIA
High Museum of Art, Atlanta
HAWAII
Museum of Contemporary Art, Honolulu
ILLINOIS
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago
Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago
LOUISIANA
New Orleans Museum of Art, New Orleans
MASSACHUSETTS
Addison Gallery of American Art, Andover
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Polaroid Photography Collection, Cambridge
NEBRASKA
Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery and Sculpture Garden, Lincoln
NEW JERSEY
Princeton University, The Art Museum, Princeton
NEW YORK
George Eastman House, Rochester
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Museum of Modern Art, New York
TEXAS
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
AUSTRALIA
Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide
Australian National Gallery, Canberra
FRANCE
Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris
JAPAN
Osaka Photography Museum, Osaka
Yokohama Museum of Art, YokohamaPublications
- Plants: Photographs by Don Worth. Published 1977 by The Friends of Photography, Carmel, California. Catalog published in conjunction with an exhibition at The Friends of Photography Gallery, September 9 to October 30, 1977.
- Don Worth: Photographs 1955-1985. Published 1986 by The Friends of Photography, Carmel, California. ISBN 0-933286-44-9.
- Don Worth: Close to Infinity, Photographs from Six Decades. Fine art photography book published 2005 Photography West Graphics, Inc. Carmel, California. ISBN 0-9616515-6-3.
Notes
- ^ Excerpt from Plants: Photographs by Don Worth. Page 42 text by Jack Welpott. Catalog published in conjuntion with an exhibition at The Friends of Photography Gallery, September 9 to October 30, 1977.
- ^ Excerpt from Don Worth: Photographs 1955-1985. Page 8, Introduction text by Hal Fischer. Published 1986 The Friends of Photography. ISBN# 0-933286-44-9
- ^ Excerpt from Don Worth: Close to Infinity, Photographs from Six Decades. Text by Leland Rice. Published 2005 Photography West Graphics ISBN#0-9616515-6-3
- ^ Don Worth: Close to Infinity, Photographs from Six Decades. From the page "Works in Selected Collections". Published 2005 Photography West Graphics ISBN#0-9616515-6-3
Categories:- 1924 births
- 2009 deaths
- American photographers
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