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Make a run for the border

Edward Weston in Mexico, plus modern Mexican prints
By GREG COOK  |  June 2, 2009

090605_mexico_main1
GALVÁN SHOOTING No gun, just the Mexican general in profile squinting in the sunlight.

“Viva Mexico! Edward Weston and His Contemporaries” and “Vida y Drama: Modern Mexican Prints” | Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave, Boston | May 30 November 2
In August 1923, photographer Edward Weston left his wife and three of his four sons in Los Angeles and headed to Mexico City. He took his eldest son and went "to start life anew" with his lover, the Italian-born actress Tina Modotti. Many argue that there he developed the crisp, clear, detailed, lyrical style that made him one of the pioneering masters of Modernist photography.

Weston's Mexico sojourn is the subject of the Museum of Fine Arts' exhibit "Viva Mexico! Edward Weston and His Contemporaries." The title prompts the hope that curator Karen Haas might dig into the juicy territory of Weston's Mexico circle and how these artists influenced one another, but this ain't that show. The handful of photos by his peers — Modotti, Paul Strand, Manuel Álvarez Bravo — provide only a smidgen of context, and they tend not to show these photographers at their best.

"Viva Mexico!" amounts to a small (43 black-and-white photos in one gallery), quick, delightful showcase of works from the renowned Modernist trove of the Lane Collection, which, on long-term loan to the MFA, includes some 2000 Weston photos acquired from his sons. But any reason for a Weston show is a good reason — and Haas rounds up some of his most iconic shots.

Weston was just beginning to break from the soft-focus, romantic Pictorialist mode championed by New York photographers Alfred Stieglitz and Edward Steichen. The transition is apparent in the shots of monumental chimneys at an Ohio steel plant that he made while on the way to New York to meet Stieglitz in 1922. There he met others in Stieglitz's orbit — like Strand and Charles Sheeler, who were already exploring similar industrial (read Modern) subjects and styles. Weston seems also to have been inspired by paintings he saw by Georgia O'Keeffe (Stieglitz's lover), works that got up close and personal with still life subjects, focusing on detailed (to the point of abstraction) parts rather than on the whole.

"Here I am in romantic Mexico, and willy-nilly, one is influenced by surroundings," he wrote in his daybooks. "Life here is intense and dramatic." He shot more than 750 images between August 1923 and December 1924, then returned to California for some eight months, then came back to Mexico for 16 more months. He had now adopted a crisp look fueled in part by the brilliant Mexican sun.

For Galván Shooting (1924), Weston joined Mexican senator and general Manuel Hernández Galván when he went to woods north of Mexico City to practice shooting. "We stopped by an old wall, the trigger of his Colt fell, and I released my shutter," Weston wrote. The resulting photo shows no gun, just Galván's head in profile squinting in the sunlight, clenching his teeth. A strand of his hair seems to ripple in the wind. He's all dashing machismo.

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  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Mexico, Photography, Galvan Shooting,  More more >
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