Sentinel (View of the Valley) 3270 ft. Yo Semite

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Sentinel (View of the Valley) 3270 ft. Yo Semite

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
1861
Medium
Albumen silver print
Culture
American
Department
Photographs
Institution
Getty Museum

Sentinel Rock, rising 3,270 feet to the heavens from the base of the Yosemite Valley, was one of the most difficult natural monuments to photograph. On the south side of the valley, along the Merced River, Carleton Watkins found an accessible location and photographed the formation late in the afternoon, benefiting from the setting sun as it highlighted the trees along the riverbank. Though initially overwhelmed by the immensity of the landscape when he first arrived in California in 1851, Watkins went on to successfully render the dramatic scale of western landscape features-mountains, trees, deserts, and oceans.

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