Stone & Tree
Stone & Tree
Stone & Tree
Stone & Tree

Paul Caponigro

Stone & Tree

Avebury, England, 1967

Original Gelatin Silver with Autographed Book

Image dimensions: 13" (L) x 10" (H)
Mounted dimensions: 22" (L) x 18" (H)

Pristine condition

certified authentic
Add to Collection — $3,000
Stone & Tree
Stone & Tree
Stone & Tree
Stone & Tree

Details

Description

Original fiber-based Gelatin Silver photograph by Paul Caponigro, “Stone & Tree.” Individually handmade by Paul Caponigro in 1993 from large format sheet film. Mounted on archival 18×22 inch museum board, signed and numbered edition of 75 in pencil on mount with artist’s stamp on verso. Accompanied by an autographed, slip-cased, numbered edition of Caponigro’s monograph, Masterworks from Forty Years.

Condition

The HD Video of the actual work in question has been provided as a visual condition report. If you would like a written condition report in addition to the HD video, please

Artist

Paul Caponigro was born in Boston in 1932. His earliest artistic interest was in music. When he was thirteen, he began to explore the world around him with his camera and studied with Benjamin Chin, Alfred S. Richter and Minor White. He became a teaching assistant to White in 1959, and has since taught, exhibited and published extensively for more than seventy years. He is currently regarded as one of America’s foremost landscape photographers.

 

paul caponigro by ginette vachon 1987

Medium

The most popular black and white process of the 20th century was gelatin silver, in which the image consists of silver metal particles suspended in a gelatin layer. Gelatin silver papers are commercially manufactured by applying an emulsion of light-sensitive silver salts in gelatin to a sheet of paper coated with a layer of baryta, a white pigment mixed with gelatin. The sensitized paper, generally fiber-based, is exposed to light through a negative and then made visible in a chemical reducing solution. William Henry Fox Talbot introduced the basic chemical process in 1839, but the more complex gelatin silver process did not become the most common method of black-and-white darkroom photography until the late 1910s. Because the silver image is suspended in a gelatin emulsion that rests on a pigment-coated paper, gelatin silver can be sharply defined and highly detailed in comparison to platinum or palladium, in which the image is absorbed directly into the fibers of the paper.

 

Cross section of Gelatin Silver paper