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Cape Cod

(American, 1912–1999)
1972
Medium/TechniquePhotograph, gelatin silver print
DimensionsImage: 19.3 x 19.3 cm (7 5/8 x 7 5/8 in.)
Sheet: 20.4 x 25.2 cm (8 1/16 x 9 15/16 in.)
Credit LinePolaroid Foundation Purchase Fund
Accession number1975.337
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsPhotographs
Description
The American photographer Harry Callahan often used his camera to crop the great expanses of nature into ever smaller and more abstract images.  His 1970s view of Cape Cod exhibits this tendancy toward almost complete abstraction.  With its square format and perfect balance between the expanse of glowing sky above and the rippled stretch of sand below, the image is stunning in its minimalism. Callahan had been drawn to photograph water for many years, especially at its edges and shorelines-first on Lake Huron and Lake Michigan and then during summers on Cape Cod. His goal was to capture in the most essential and economic way possible the subtle shifts of light and atmosphere at these ephemeral intersections where the sky ends and the earth and water begin.
InscriptionsSigned with full name in pencil lower right and on verso; also on verso "351"
ProvenanceLight Gallery, New York; purchased June 1975.
Copyright© The Estate of Harry Callahan, courtesy Pace/MacGill Gallery, N.Y.
Eleanor
Harry Callahan
1947
Chicago
Harry Callahan
1950
Eleanor, 1948
Harry Callahan
1948
Chicago
Harry Callahan
about 1950
Cuzco
Harry Callahan
1974
Cape Cod, 1972
Harry Callahan
1972
Aix-en-Provence (Wood)
Harry Callahan
1957
Eleanor
Harry Callahan
1948
Eleanor
Harry Callahan
about 1948
New York
Harry Callahan
1945
Camera movement on flashlight
Harry Callahan
1946–47