Yo Semite Falls. 2630 ft.

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Yo Semite Falls. 2630 ft.

Creator

Carleton Watkins

American Photographer · 1829–1916

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At twenty, Carleton Watkins headed out to California to make his fortune. After working as a daguerreotype operator in San Jose, he established his own practice and soon made his first visit to the Yosemite Valley. There he made thirty mammoth plate and one hundred stereograph views that were among the first photographs of Yosemite seen in the East. Partly on the strength of Watkins's photographs,

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Date
July 1861
Medium
Stereograph, glass
Culture
American
Department
Photographs
Institution
Getty Museum

This stereograph demonstrates Carleton Watkins's preoccupation with the foreground as a defining element of space in his landscape photographs. Although Yosemite Falls is the principal subject, the strongly vertical trees and the cabin with its diagonal striping of sunlight and shadow dominate the image. Nevertheless, the falls are perfectly framed between the trees just above the cabin, their distance evident in the severe shift in tone between the area of the foreground and the mountains. When viewed through the stereoscope viewer, which gives a three-dimensional effect, the contrast between the planes of focus becomes even more apparent.

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