When a master printer picks up the camera

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, April 24, 2024


When a master printer picks up the camera
"Scottish Engine, Puerto Rico," c. 1980, by Richard Benson (American, 1943–2017). Gelatin silver print, image and sheet: 7 1/2 × 9 1/2 inches, mount: 18 × 14 inches. © Estate of Richard M. A. Benson. Promised gift of William M. and Elizabeth Ann Kahane. Image courtesy Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2021.

by Arthur Lubow



PHILADELPHIA, PA.- Is technical wizardry enough to make someone an artist?

Richard Benson was unrivaled as a printer of photographs before he became a photographer. Hired in his early 20s by an art book printing company to make halftone negatives to run on an offset press, he realized, as he later wrote, “I couldn’t understand printing without first mastering photography, and so my career began.”

At the time of his death at 73 in 2017, Benson profoundly understood the processes and techniques of photographic printing. He was also a beloved professor and dean at Yale University. His own work with a camera, however, received less attention. “The World Is Smarter Than You Are,” an exhibition through Jan. 23 at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, is his first museum retrospective. (The title is one of his favorite adages.)

There can be no argument about his prowess. One of his early pictures, “John Bull’s Great Stone, Common Burying Ground, Newport, Rhode Island” (1973-78), was made with a large-format view camera and composed of two contact prints mounted side by side. It depicts a series of six headstones for babies in one family, each marker incised with the face of an angel. Benson descended from a family of Newport stone carvers that dated to Colonial times. This composition, framed with perfect symmetry and sharp as a scalpel, is almost palpable, an appreciative flourish across the centuries from one consummate craftsman to another.

In black-and-white and color, in film and digital, in platinum prints, offset lithographs and inkjet prints, Benson mastered the procedures and, when he found them inadequate, invented his own. Like those sonically stunning LPs that were recorded to demonstrate the range of the first generation of stereos, Benson’s photographs often seem designed to mark the outer limits of what photography can practically achieve.

For reproducing photographs in a 1985 book devoted to the extraordinary Gilman Paper Company Collection (later acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York), he amplified the duotone process, in which ink is passed through a fine mesh screen to impart subtle shades of black, gray and even, for older photographs, purple and sepia. The technique also allowed him to enlarge a negative without sacrificing detail. “Fall River Boiler,” a black-and-white image that he photographed in 1978 and printed a decade or so later, is a nocturne of texture and tone: feathery asbestos, gloppy encrustations, circular black holes.




Benson was just as proficient in color. “Georgia” (2007), which portrays a vertical array of four signs — two red octagonal stop signs, two circular railroad crossings, in yellow and orange — makes a visual counterpoint to three storage silos in the background that are painted red, blue and yellow-embellished silver. But the most virtuosic turn is the rendition of the sky, which is bleached out to a pale blue-gray at the horizon and gradually darkens to a full-throated cerulean at the top. If, as Willem de Kooning once remarked, flesh was the reason oil paint was created, Benson in his many crepuscular photographs makes the case that twilight skies were the reason color film was invented.

He started color photography in earnest in the early ’90s and soon embraced digital photography. Finding the prevailing methods of color printing to be wanting, he innovated a procedure of inkjet printing in which, as in his lithography, he ran the sheet through the printer several times, applying the blacks and colors in layers. It is a little like the dye-transfer printing used by William Eggleston, but the colors are less saturated and the process less laborious. The reflections in a lake, the roseate ribbon of a sunset, the rainbow created as light passes through an irrigation mister — all are rendered with poetic precision.

In some of Benson’s black-and-white photographs of building interiors, like “65 Kenyon Street, Hartford, Connecticut” (1974), I thought of Walker Evans. Edward Weston floated into my consciousness as I looked at the organic semi-abstraction of “Agave” (c. 1975-85). And it was hard to avoid recalling Eggleston in viewing the color jolts of the vintage red truck in “Wyoming” (2008), or the lime-green rowboat in “Newfoundland” (2006-08).

Walking through the show, I saw the work of someone thoroughly imbued with the tradition, science and artistry of photography. But I was also reminded of a remark by Henry James, in a letter from 1888, about John Singer Sargent, who, similarly, could achieve with a brush anything he asked of it. “Yes, I have always thought Sargent a great painter,” James said. “He would be greater still if he had one or two little things he hasn’t — but he will do.”



‘Richard Benson: The World Is Smarter Than You Are’

Through Jan. 23, Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2600 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, (215) 763-8100; philamuseum.org.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

January 1, 2022

Doris Lee, unjustly forgotten, gets a belated but full blown tribute

Eli Wilner & Company offers partial funding to museums for frame restoration projects

The Broad presents special exhibition 'Since Unveiling: Selected Acquisitions of a Decade'

The Met exhibits more than 100 Modernist British prints created between 1913 and 1939

How we make sense of time

When a master printer picks up the camera

How much would you pay for Karl Lagerfeld's gloves?

Is that a burning bush? Is this Mount Sinai? Solstice bolsters a claim

High Museum of Art presents KAWS prints exhibition

Betty White, a TV fixture for seven decades, is dead at 99

Pipilotti Rist's first West Coast survey on view at the Museum of Contemporary Art

First comprehensive survey of the work of Hildegard Heise on view at the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg

Once a janitor, now the bar mitzvah photography king of Montreal

Sam Fender, a songwriter caught between stardom and his hometown

On Broadway stages, the beautiful rooms are empty

Ben McFall, 'the Heart of the Strand,' is dead at 73

Maggie Gyllenhaal has dangerous ideas about directing

A story of love and obsession

In Mexico, women directors take the lead

Sneaker sellers wrestle with price spikes after Virgil Abloh's death

British Museum and Shropshire Museums to develop new Partnership Gallery

'Emily in Paris' and the city I thought was mine

The Hamburger Kunsthalle presents the first solo exhibition in Germany of the work of Toyen

William Morris' beloved country home Kelmscott Manor to reopen after major refurbishment programme




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful