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 Classifieds > Collectibles > ArtFlag
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Fine Art Photography, Black & White,Todd Webb, Genoa NV, 1955

Item ID#:303810Location:
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Seller ID#:92347  Premium advertiser Views:
2293
Price:$650Expires:25 days
Todd Webb (1905-2000)

Genoa, Nevada
B&W Photograph taken in 1955
Frame Size - 13x11 inches
Print Size - 9 ½ x 7 ½ inches

Purchased from Camera Obscura Gallery, Denver, CO in 1990.

The concerns of the day being discussed at the bar. The bar continues to this day - a note from the current owners: "Welcome to the Genoa Bar and Saloon, Nevada's Oldest Thirst Parlor!

Our guests always have many questions, and I hope to answer some of them for you...

First of all...the building was built in 1853 and I was first open for business as Livingston's Exchange, then renamed "Fettic's Exchange" in 1884 and operated by Frank Fettic. It was well known as a "gentleman's saloon" back then and I was "kept in first-class style in every particular way." Mr. Fettic served fine wines, liquors, and cigars. According to one of his advertisements, " would be pleased to have all my old friends call, and they would be treated in the most cordial manner." See color image for 2010.

This photograph appears in "Todd Webb Photographs, Early Western Trails and Some Ghost Towns," page 37. This show was at the Amon Carter Museum from 25 Nov. 1965 until 16 Jan 1966.

Additional Information:

In 1905, Charles Clayton ("Todd") Webb III was born in Detroit, Michigan. Like Atget, Webb came to his ultimate profession late in life in 1939. He had been a successful stockbroker in the Twenties, then lost his earnings in The Crash that precursored the Great Depression. During the Depression, Webb prospected for gold, worked as a forest ranger, and for about a decade wrote short stories that no one would publish. Finally Webb went to work for Chrysler Corporation in their Export Division to further his interest in international affairs. In 1938 Webb joined the Chrysler Camera Club, where Webb met aspiring photographer Harry Callahan. Webb and Callahan embarked on their photographic career together, which began with a workshop from Ansel Adams. The workshop with Adams reaffirmed Webb's interest in the sharp focus technique of "straight photography," rejecting the popular manipulated methods of the Pictorialists.

After photographing for the Navy in WWII in the South Pacific, Webb moved to New York in the early 1940's. Webb soon developed his own unique style of photographing and was further encouraged by Alfred Stieglitz, the often considered "Godfather of modern photography," to immerse himself in the medium. Stieglitz introduced Webb to Georgia O'Keeffe, Berenice Abbott, Lisette Model, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Walker Evans and Edward Steichen, all of whom became important figures in Webb's life.

In 1946 Webb's photographic career soared with the showing of 165 photographs at the Museum of the City of New York. Soon after his first exhibition, he was hired by Fortune Magazine and by Roy Stryker of Standard Oil, who had previously headed the Historical Section of the Farm Security Administration. Webb worried that working for Standard Oil might affect his feelings about photography, yet Stryker was an extraordinary editor who helped Webb come to terms with making a living as a photographer.

After his work with Stryker and a few years of photographing in France, Todd Webb followed the trail of the Gold Rush of 1849 across the country with the help of two Guggenheim Fellowships. During his travels out West, he remained in contact with Stieglitz's widow, Georgia O'Keeffe. His friendship with O'Keeffe developed and endured, eventually leading Webb and his wife Lucille to join O'Keeffe in New Mexico for 10 years.

Up until the 1980's, Todd Webb photographed and produced an unique body of work which attained an important place in the annals of American photographic history. Frequently referred to as "an historian with a camera," Webb's wonderfully rich images document life all over the world, including New York, France and the American West. His work has been internationally exhibited, with important shows in New York, Santa Fe, Tokyo and London. Todd Webb's work is in the collections of fifteen major museums, including the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA), NY: the Metropolitan Museum of Art: the Chicago Art Institute: and the George Eastman House, Rochester, NY. On April 15, 2000 at the age of 94, Todd Webb passed away peacefully in central Maine. His wife, Lucille, passed away in 2008, I believe.

Note: My Ad Categories selection (left column) redirects to only specific items, i.e. Other Artists will redirect to my personal collections art listings only.
http://www.toddwebbphotographs.com/home.html
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