Sunrise, Wild Reeds & Waterlilies
Sunrise, Wild Reeds & Waterlilies
Sunrise, Wild Reeds & Waterlilies
Sunrise, Wild Reeds & Waterlilies

Christopher Burkett

Sunrise, Wild Reeds & Waterlilies

Canada, 1987

Original Cibachrome Photograph

Pristine condition

certified authentic
Add to Collection $1,500.00
Sunrise, Wild Reeds & Waterlilies
Sunrise, Wild Reeds & Waterlilies
Sunrise, Wild Reeds & Waterlilies
Sunrise, Wild Reeds & Waterlilies

Details

Description

Original Cibachrome photograph by Christopher Burkett, “Sunrise, Wild Reeds & Waterlilies.” Individually handmade by Christopher Burkett from 8×10-format transparency film. Mounted on cotton rag Antique Rising Museum Board. Signed in pencil on mount with title, date and edition number on verso.

 

ARTIST STATEMENT

“In 1987, my wife Ruth and I spent over a month in Newfoundland as part of our six month trip photographing around the United States and Canada. Newfoundland was an exceptionally wild and beautiful place, and the people were genuinely helpful and cordial. The air is very clean, with lots of wild birds, and the landscape is generally untouched and untrammeled by man.

One main difficulty about photographing there is the constant wind. The island is flat and even when the wind is completely calm at night, by daybreak there is a stiff wind which rises during the day to a very brisk breeze (or more!) throughout the day. This makes it difficult to photograph with an 8”x 10” camera. This photograph was taken in the interior of Newfoundland and is a detail of a wild rocky tundra pool. It was very early in the morning in late September and the sun was just beginning to rise. There was almost no wind at this time and it seemed as though the reeds and waterlilies were floating with the clouds, as the pink colors of the sky mingled with the pastel blue water. For me, the image conveys a soft, delicate feminine quality of peace and life.”

Condition

All Christopher Burkett photographs sold at Photography West are new and in pristine condition. HD videos of the individual piece you are purchasing are available upon request. For more information, please

Artist

Christopher Burkett has labored for over four decades to create what many regard as the most impeccable and luminous color photographs in the history of photography. Gifted with a contemplative spirit as well as painter’s eye, Burkett has an uncommon ability to capture the natural world in a manner that simultaneously reflects “the world behind the world” as Minor White and Paul Caponigro might have put it. And although Burkett has been compared by curators to American color landscape photographers Eliot Porter and Ernst Haas, whose genre of American landscape photography he extended, neither of them exclusively developed their own film, nor attempted the darkroom standard clearly in evidence upon viewing Burkett’s original Cibachromes.

 

Medium

Cibachrome, also known as Ilfochrome, is among the most stable of all color photographic processes. The dyes reside within the emulsion layers, giving the photograph its characteristic color saturation. The base is a polyester triacetate, rather than fiber-based paper, which adds to the longevity. It was a positive-to-positive photographic process based on the Gasparcolor process, created in 1933 by Bela Gaspar, a Hungarian chemist. Purchased after the merger of Ilford UK and Ciba-Geigy Photochemie of Switzerland, the process was first trademarked and marketed as Cibachrome in 1963. Each Cibachrome is composed of ten layers containing various combinations of light-sensitive silver halides and dyes that are sensitive to blue, green, or red light waves, which gives it an incredible depth and three-dimensional quality. After exposure of a positive, either through an enlarger or direct contact, the Cibachrome must be developed with black-and-white developing chemicals. This step creates a silver negative image within the layers. Next, the photograph must be bleached. The bleaching rids the photograph of dyes in proportion to the amount of silver that has been developed in the previous step and produces a positive dye image in color. In 2011, Cibachrome/Ilfochrome products were discontinued and it is now considered a historical process.