James Hyman curates important exhibition of early French photographs for New York and London

FROM SERMONS IN STONES TO MONSTERS OF MODERNITY
EARLY FRENCH PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE CHURCH

 

New York and London, April-June 2012

 

JAMES HYMAN PHOTOGRAPHY is delighted to present one of the most substantial exhibitions of rare, early salt prints ever staged by a commercial gallery.

 

This specially curated presentation brings together two of the greatest achievements of Western civilization: Gothic architecture and the invention of photography.

 

Curated by James Hyman, who also wrote the catalogiue essay, this museum quality exhibition includes loans as well as works for sale.

 

The exhibition title references the religious significance of the portal programmes of Gothic cathedrals with their multiple biblical scenes as well as the gargoyles of Notre Dame that were the mid-nineteenth century invention of Viollet-le-Duc.

 

The exhibition traces the ways in which the great Gothic churches and cathedrals of France were placed at the heart of their work by the most important French photographers of the 1840s and 1850s.

 

The artists presented will include Edouard Baldus, Edmond Bacot, Hippolyte Bayard, Bisson Frères, Gustave le Gray, Ange Mailand, Pierre Manguin, Charles Marville, Charles Nègre, Emile Pecarrère (Em. Pec.), Henri Le Secq, and Varin Frères.

 

The exhibition is accompanied by a scholarly new book on the subject with an essay by James Hyman. In it Hyman argues: ‘The daemons of science, positivism and modernism have conspired to obscure spirituality and humanism by equating photography with realism and photography of architecture with a merely documentary function.’ Instead he proposes that:

 

‘The Gothic revival of the mid nineteenth century and specifically the legacy of Victor Hugo’s novel, Notre Dame de Paris (1831) provided a lead towards a creative, subjective, even fantastic approach to the photographic motif... Whilst it may be more comfortable to ally early photographers, first to the enlightenment and then to Modernism, the preponderance of religious images suggests something more complex in their negotiation between the forces of church and state. The more one engages with content, as well as technique and form, the more one appreciates that the first years of photography in France – from patronage to production – are inextricably linked with a revived interest not just in France’s cultural patrimonie, and specifically a renewed appreciation of this Gothic ecclesiastical past, but also religious revivalism.’

 

Highlights include Charles Nègre’s intimate depiction of a priest seated at prayer, rare salt prints by Pierre Manguin and a selection of extraordinary salt prints of cathedral portals by Brebisson, Em. Pec., Le Secq, Bisson Frères and Nègre.

May 1, 2012
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