- Pepper No. 30
Sheet: 9 7/16 × 7 1/2 in. (24 × 19.1 cm)
Mount: 18 × 14 in. (45.7 × 35.6 cm)
Explore Further
In contrast to the clinical views promoted by European
photographers associated with the New Objectivity in the late 1920s, Edward
Weston looked at nature for its poetry and metaphor. His photograph of a pepper,
twisting in the dramatic light of his studio like intertwining bodies, shows
the vegetable in all of its sensuousness. Weston once stated that the goal of
his art was to reveal “The Thing Itself . . . to photograph a rock, have
it look like a rock, but be more than a rock.” This idea of looking at
the symbolic meaning of form while taking “straight,” sharply focused images
was foundational for photographers favoring a more subjective approach in the
middle decades of the 20th century, particularly in the United States.
ProvenanceEx-collection Cole Weston; Sotheby's, New York; ex-collection Weston Neaf, New York.
Bought by Manfred Heiting from The Weston Gallery, Inc. on 4/19/1985.
Exhibition History"Edward Weston", Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1946; "Die Künstlichkeit des Wirklichen", Kestnergesellschaft, Hannover,1998; "La Natura della Naturamorta - da Fox Talbot ai Nostri Giorni", Galeria d'Arte Moderna, Bologna, 2001;
"American Vision: Photographers from the West, Selections from the Manfred Heiting Collection purchased by the Brown Foundation for the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston from August 23-February 1, 2004.
"Passionate Vision: Celebrating the Life and Photographic Work of Beaumont Newhall," The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Lower Brown Corridor and Coat Check Room Gallery, January 15-May 4, 2008.
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
Signed and dated in pencil, recto of mount, below image: Edward Weston 1930
Inscribed in pencil, verso of mount, upper left: 30P
Stamped in red, verso of mount, center: WESTON J. NAEF // [symbols - possibly Korean characters?] [yin and yang symbol in center of circle]
Inscribed in pencil by Weston Naef, verso of mount, lower right: Probably from an exhibition circulated / in Great Britain, 1938-40. / $525 / Burnside 1/73 / Sotheby's Lot
Cataloguing data may change with further research.
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