
<p>In 1923 Edward Weston embarked on a new life in Mexico, leaving California behind him. He set up a portrait studio with his muse and apprentice, Tina Modotti, who introduced him to such artists as Diego Rivera and José Clemente Orozco. Stimulated by the vital Mexican culture—as well as by his previous contacts with the great photographers Charles Sheeler, Alfred Stieglitz, and Paul Strand—Weston’s soft-focus, painterly style underwent a radical change. “The camera must be used for a recording of <em>life</em>,” he wrote during this period, “for rendering the very substance and quintessence of the <em>thing</em> itself.” This simple metal washbowl, which he stored under his sink, is an example of the new and unconventional subjects Weston began to photograph during his Mexican sojourn. In his obsession with clarity of form and precision of image, he pioneered a technique that he called “previsualizing”—looking at a scene through the camera and determining how that would translate to a print; any cropping, trimming, or enlarging of the print was rejected as a betrayal of vision. Here he captured the worn metal and porcelain surfaces of the washbowl and sink with sensuous, almost preternatural clarity. An important transitional piece, this work prefigures Weston’s exquisite and erotic studies of nudes, shells, and plant forms.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1925
- Medium
- Platinum print
- Dimensions
- 24.3 × 18.9 cm (9 5/8 × 7 1/2 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Edward Weston
Artist

Photography
Edward Weston was an American photographer who pioneered a sharp-focus, high-contrast aesthetic that transformed photography into a fine art medium. Working primarily in black and white, he composed intimate studies of vegetables, shells, nudes, and landscapes with precise formal abstraction, treating organic forms as sculptural subjects. His influential approach to photographic composition and tonality shaped modernist photography from the 1920s onward. Weston's legacy rests on his insistence that photography required the same conceptual rigor and material mastery as painting or sculpture.
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More by Edward Weston
Point Lobos
1948 · Gelatin silver print
Point Lobos
1947 · Gelatin silver print
Point Lobos
1947 · Gelatin silver print
Cypress and Stone Crop, Point Lobos
1946 · Gelatin silver print, printed 1952
Cypress and Stone Crop, Point Lobos
1946 · Gelatin silver print
Cypress and Stone Crop, Point Lobos, No. 9 from the "Fiftieth Anniversary Portfolio 1902–1952"
1946 · Gelatin silver print
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Edward Weston
- Year
- 1925
- Medium
- Platinum print
- Dimensions
- 24.3 × 18.9 cm (9 5/8 × 7 1/2 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1925-025381
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





