Tim Hawkinson | Octopus | Cindy Sherman | Untitled Film Still #82 | Robert Glenn Ketchum | Lakeshore in Morning Fog | Abelardo Morell | Camera Obscura Image of the Grand Tetons in Resort Room, Jackson Hole, Wyoming | John Sanchez | Rachel Rosenthal, Artist | Mitch Epstein | Buena Vista, Colorado | Leland Rice | Volkswagen With Figure | Catherine Wagner | The Lamps of 1900 | Ned Sloane | Telephone Pole Piece, Los Angeles: Photograph of Kim Jones | Andrew Freeman | #3.4.04- Don Becker's Garage & Guesthouse, Independence, California N36O.48.229 - W118O.11.620 | Ken Gonzales-Day | Franklin Avenue (1920) | Jo Ann Callis | Man in Tie | Bruce Nauman | Burning Small Fires (Artist Book) | Annie Leibovitz | Scarlett Johansson, Chateau Marmont, West Hollywood | David Maisel | Oblivion 1382-52p | Gilbert B. Weingourt | Timothy Leary | Richard Misrach | Untitled (Ocotillo) | Edward Steichen | Sylvia Sidney, Hollywood | Ruben Ochoa | Fwy Wall Extraction | Hunter S. Thompson and others | From "Gonzo" | Henry Wessel | Las Vegas No. 15 | James Fee | Epiphany | John Baldessari | Face (with Red Nose): Plus Four Alternate Noses | Anthony Hernandez | Everything #2 | Ansel Adams | Graduation dress | Loretta Ayeroff | Mountain View, Edris Drive | Grant Mudford | Walt Disney Concert Hall, Under Construction #7 | Frederick Sommer | Stendhal | Tina Modotti | Interior of the Church Tower at Tepotzotlan | Henri Cartier-Bresson | Mexico City | Irving Penn | Hell's Angels, San Francisco | William Dassonville | From Glacier Point | Christina Fernandez | Fashion International | Mark Laita | Air Traffic Controller, Todd Phipps, Palmdale, California, May 5, 2006
Juggler, Sergey Gripkov, Los Angeles, February 21, 2000 | Mark Wyse | Untitled Landscape | U.S. Air Force 1352nd Photographic Group, Lookout Mountain Station | Sugar, 1.2 Kilotons, Nevada | Julius Shulman | Von Sternberg Residence, Northridge | Joaquin Trujillo | Amy, Los Ninos | Robert Heinecken | Shiva Manifesting as a Single Mother | Han Nguyen | Tsunami | Melanie Einzig | Bikram Yoga Instructor, North Beach, San Francisco | John Patrick Salisbury | Untitled No. 134 | Karen Halverson | Gamble House Entry | Bill Owens | 4th of July Parade, Pleasanton, California | Catherine Opie | My Studio, Suzanne's Work | Eliot Porter | Reflections in Pool, Escalante River, Utah | Adam Bartos | Los Angeles | Stan Honda | From the Heart Mountain Barracks Project | Hiromu Kira | The Thinker | Jeff Mermelstein | Yosemite National Park, California | Lewis Baltz | West Wall, Unoccupied Industrial Structure, 20 Airway Drive, Costa Mesa | Dennis Hopper | Robert Irwin | Hansel Mieth and Otto Hagel | S.F. Water Front | Edward Burtynsky | Oxford Tire Pile #8, Westley, California | Beahan & McPhee | Almond Trees and Flood Irrigation, Oakdale | Larry Sultan | Boxers, Mission Hills | Isabel Gomes | Blue Horizon, Santa Rosa Island | Edward Weston | Cabbage Leaf | Anthony Friedkin | Offshore Winds, Zuma Beach | Richard Long | Donner Pass Circle: Along a 20 Day Walk from Ebbetts Pass to the North Fork Feather River Sierra Nevada California 2005 | John Swope | Dorothy McGuire, Beverly Hills | Hans-Christian Schink | LA Night #1 | Herve Friend | Redlands From Smiley Hill | Joel Sternfeld | Queen of the Prom, the Range Nightclub, Slab City, California |
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| William Dassonville From Glacier Point 1905 (ca) Paul M. Hertzmann, Inc Courtesy of the William E. Dassonville Trust and Paul M. Hertzmann Inc., San Francisco LL/16153 Photo Synthesis
Colin Westerbeck
"Yosemite: Art of an American Icon," Part I, is on view at the Autry National Center's Museum of the American West in Griffith Park through Jan. 21, 2007.
William Dassonville's pictures first attracted notice at the California Camera Club Exhibition of Industrial Arts in 1901. Today, the phrase "industrial arts" sounds quaint and seems an odd pigeonhole in which to stick photography. Yet it was as an inventor and entrepreneur, rather than as an artist, that Dassonville made a unique mark on photo history. In 1924, he began manufacturing a photographic paper he called Charcoal Black. By using exotic papers, pictorialists could in the terminology of the time "ennoble" their photographs. Even Ansel Adams used Charcoal Black in his youth.
The paper resulted from experiments Dassonville had begun years earlier, printing photographs on Japanese tissue. As his eccentric view of Yosemite from Glacier Point demonstrates, it was not only the materials of Japanese prints, but also their compositional values, or notan, that impressed the San Francisco photographer.
The exhibition title refers to Yosemite as an icon, and Dassonville's picture is definitely an iconic one of the West. It uses the radical borders and silhouetted forms of Japanese art to create an image of a place fringed by mountains and towering pine forests, yet vastly blank in the center. It's Big Sky Country, a landscape that is, like drifting clouds, empty and ever-changing.
[Originally published in West Magazine : September 24, 2006, p.15]
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