“THE OUTLINE OF THE CATHEDRAL ROCKS… AT YOSEMITE”: BEAUTIFUL LARGE ORIGINAL 1865 ALBUMEN PHOTOGRAPH, INSCRIBED ON THE VERSO BY CARLETON E. WATKINS
WATKINS, Carleton E. Outline of the Cathedral Rocks. Yosemite, circa 1865. Original albumen photograph, measuring 8 by 12 inches.
Original albumen landscape photograph of the Cathedral Rocks at Yosemite, inscribed in pencil on the verso: “Outline of the Cathedral Rocks, Yosemite, C. Watkins, W-A14.”
“Of all the great 19th-century landscape photographs, those of Carleton E. Watkins are the most perfectly poised between document and art” (Parr & Badger, 13). Credited with “the discovery of the Western landscape,” Watkins “traveled up the Yosemite Valley, discovered in 1856, using large plates to capture the romantic and sublime mood of the magnificent virgin territory” (Frizot, 165). “Watkins was one of the great pioneers of American landscape photography. His surviving photos are highly prized; much of his life’s work was destroyed in the great San Francisco earthquake and fire on 1906… His reputation was established after his first trip to Yosemite to photograph in 1861. Watkins’ photos were used to convince Congress to forever protect Yosemite, and they led to President Abraham Lincoln’s landmark 1864 signing of the Yosemite Act… His photographs are significant because they were the first to present the wilderness as it was before explorers set foot on the land” (McDarrah & McDarrah, 522). Watkins’ photography allowed Americans to substitute naturally occurring geological formations for the old monuments and churches that characterized Europe, creating a national heritage. As Watkins was known primarily for his 18 by 22 inch mammoth plate photographs and stereoviews and as the majority of his negatives were destroyed by the San Francisco earthquake and fire, this medium-sized image is highly desirable.
A few spots of pinpoint foxing and very slightest rubbing to bottom edge. A lovely about-fine inscribed photograph.