- Gramercy Park, New York: April 24, 1997
Sheet: 23 5/16 × 20 3/8 in. (59.2 × 51.8 cm)
Frame: 29 × 33 × 2 in. (73.7 × 83.8 × 5.1 cm)
Explore Further
Vera Lutter is well-known for
her straight-forward, monumental photographs of urban landscapes, historic
monuments, and industrial sites created with a camera obscura (“dark room” in Latin), a device which was used to
produce direct images of reality before the invention of photography. A camera obscura is made by creating a
small opening in an otherwise sealed room or chamber. Light from an external
source penetrates the opening, which acts as a lens, and is cast, upside down,
on an opposite surface. Lutter hangs black-and-white photographic paper on the
opposite wall to capture the image. The resulting pictures are one-of-a-kind
paper negatives. Gramercy Park, New York
is an early example of this process.
Provenance[Manfred Heiting, Malibu, California]; purchased by MFAH, 2002.
Exhibition HistoryExhibited in "Contemporary Photos from the Manfred Heiting Collection" at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, 5/17 through 8/10/03.
Exhibited "Target Collection of American Photography: A Century in Pictures",
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston December 3 - February 25, 2007
Austin Museum of Art May 19 - August 12, 2007
Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi June 5 - August 24, 2008
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
Cataloguing data may change with further research.
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