Center for Creative Photography
A Passionate Collaboration is the first exhibition to explore the complex relationship this remarkable pair shared for over a decade. They had a profound influence on each other and on the history of photography just before and after the First World War as photography teetered back and forth between pictorialism and modernism. The exhibition features 80 photographs drawn from more than 25 collections and illuminates the often-overlooked body of work of Margrethe Mather, and Weston's work from 1913 to 1925.
A Passionate Collaboration
2003-07-22 until 2003-10-12
Margrethe Mather and Edward Weston: A Passionate Collaboration is the
first exhibition to explore the complex relationship this remarkable
pair shared for over a decade. They had a profound influence on each
other and on the history of photography just before and after the First
World War as photography teetered back and forth between pictorialism
and modernism. The exhibition features 80 photographs drawn from more
than 25 collections and illuminates the often-overlooked body of work of
Margrethe Mather, and Weston's work from 1913 to 1925.
As an American photography icon, Edward Weston is widely renowned as one
of the twentieth century's most important photographers. Margrethe
Mather, however, remains a little known and enigmatic figure, despite
her amazing body of work and well-documented artistic collaboration with
Weston. Many consider Mather to have been Weston's mentor and teacher.
She shared with him her intuitive eye for composition and her innate
sense of artistic style. By example she showed him how to edit an image
to its very essence. He was introduced to her circle of bohemian
friends, who taught him to view life from a variety of perspectives. In
turn, Weston encouraged Mather to exhibit her work and compete for
recognition.
Edward Weston met Margrethe Mather in Los Angeles in 1913 and the two
began a journey that brought them together as companions, lovers, and
business associates. In 1921, they even worked as full-fledged artistic
partners, co-signing the photographs they produced in a relationship
unique in Weston's career. Collaboratively they founded the Camera
Pictorialists of Los Angeles in 1914 that became one of the most
important camera clubs and exhibition venues in the country.
Although Weston was stimulated by Mather's intellectual curiosity, and
for a time was passionately in love with her, he was also frustrated
with her lack of dependability and capricious lifestyle. When Weston
departed for Mexico in 1923, he entrusted his Glendale studio to
Mather's care. By 1925, she lost interest in sustaining the business and
drifted back to her old bohemian haunts on Bunker Hill in downtown Los
Angeles. She continued to take photographs sporadically until the
mid-1930s when she appears to have turned her back on photography
altogether.
In the early 1950s, recalling the greatest influences on his career,
Edward Weston declared that Margrethe Mather was "the first important
person in my life." Until recently, she has been remembered mostly
through Weston's commentary and that of William Justema, another artist
friend. A smattering of information has been collected by Weston's
biographer Ben Maddow, and his daybooks editor Nancy Newhall. The
exhibition sheds light on this mysterious figure who had her own very
successful career apart from Weston. It firmly places Mather's work
within the milieu in which it was created-critically re-evaluating and
acknowledging her place in the history of photography. Her work has
always held its own in the company of great photographs. Yet, for many
years, she remained one of the most forgotten photographers of the
twentieth century.
Mather and Weston constantly sought out fresh visual vocabularies to set
their work apart from that of their contemporaries. They were never
satisfied with the formulaic or predictable approach, even though it
could have brought them considerable critical acclaim and financial
rewards. They were, in many ways, harmonious spirits who believed that
photography was the ultimate means of expression in the modern world.
SPONSORS
Margrethe Mather and Edward Weston: A Passionate Collaboration was
co-curated by Beth Gates Warren, former director of Sotheby's New York
Department of Photographs, and Karen Sinsheimer, Curator of Photography
at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art (SBMA). The exhibition was organized
by the Santa Barbara Museum of Art and made possible by the generous
support of the Dana and Albert R. Broccoli Charitable Foundation.
PUBLICATION
The exhibition is accompanied by the publication Margrethe Mather and
Edward Weston:
A Passionate Collaboration (SBMA/W. W. Norton & Company, 2001) which
contains an essay by Beth Gates Warren and an introduction by Karen
Sinsheimer. The book won the Publishers Marketing Association's 2002
Benjamin Franklin Award for excellence in editorial and design. The book
retails for $39.95 and is available at the CCP shop. Members receive a
10% discount. (160 pages, 8 ? x 10" with 94 duotone photographs. ISBN
0-393-04157-3.)
About CCP's WESTON ARCHIVE AND MATHER COLLECTION
The Center for Creative Photography is home to the Edward Weston
Archive, representing his life's work and documenting his extensive
career. The Center acquired the Edward Weston Archive from his four sons
in 1981. The archive includes over 2,000 prints and nearly 10,000
negatives, as well as original daybooks and correspondence. The archive
also includes an assortment of records documenting his travels to
Mexico, his two Guggenheim Fellowship trips, and a variety of ephemera
that relates to his life and career.
The Margrethe Mather Collection was acquired by CCP in the late 1970s
through the Witkin Gallery, New York, from Mather's friend, model and
collaborator William Justema, who preserved this work. It contains over
150 photographs-the largest collection of her work anywhere-featuring
portraits and still lifes, as well as documents of sketches by Justema.
Correspondence with and about Mather is included in the Center's Edward
Weston archival materials.
CCP
Center for Creative Photography
The University of Arizona
1030 North Olive Road
P.O. Box 210103
Tucson, AZ 85721-0103
Phone: 520-621-7968
Fax: 520-621-9444