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Sun Pictures of Yosemite

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Sun Pictures of Yosemite
Sun Pictures of Yosemite
Item Details
Description
Heading: (Weed, Charles L. & Eadweard Muybridge)
Author:
Title: Sun Pictures of the Yo Semite Valley, Cal.
Place Published: Chicago
Publisher:Published by Coyne & Relyea; Knight & Leonard, Printers
Date Published: 1874
Description:


With title leaf on stiff card stock printed in red & black, and 44 original albumen photographs on card stock mounts lithographically printed with captions and imprints of Thomas Houseworth & Col., San Francisco. Images approx. 16.5x22 cm. (6¾x8½") or reverse, on mounts 26.5x34.5 cm. (10½x13¾"); disbound, with the title-page and mounted photographs loose in the original half morocco & gilt-lettered cloth covers. First Edition.



Sun Pictures of the Yosemite Valley, published by Thomas Houseworth & Co., in 1884 is one of the rarest books in the annals of Yosemite. The total of known copies can be counted on one’s fingers with a few digits left over, and the majority are in institutional libraries. Very few are known in private hands. Containing a total of 43 or 44 large-plate original photographs (this copy has 44), Sun  Pictures is also one of the most extensive photographically illustrated works. A survey of the views and a comparison with the Lawrence & Houseworth boxed set of mammoth plate views taken by Charles Leander Weed in 1864 indicated that 19 of the views are by Charles Weed, Yosemite’s first photographer, while the remaining 25 are by Eadweard James Muybridge. In the half dozen years that elapsed between Weed’s 1864 mammoth views and those taken by Muybridge in 1872, Muybridge had invented a “sky shade” that prevented overexposure in the area of blue skies and thus permitted the imaging of clouds. The majority of Muybridge views in the book that show areas of sky display clouds, whereas the earlier Weed views do not, showing the rapid advance in early photographic technology. Eadweard Muybridge wanted his own name to appear on the photographic mounts, but publisher Thomas Houseworth, who had financed the expedition to Yosemite, would not allow this. As a result, Houseworth received only a limited number of mammoth views to satisfy Muybridge's contractual obligation. Subsequently, Muybridge abandoned ship and took the remainder of his negatives to the firm of Bradley and Rulofson, which published them in 1873. Significantly, the Bradley & Rulofson mounts bear an imprint that credits Muybridge as photographer. The most historical of the images in Sun Pictures is that of Muybridge himself, seated on a Thos. Houseworth & Co. photographic box at the base of a Yosemite Big Tree. Muybridge included this portrait of himself among the views he gave to Houseworth. It was his way of “signing” the group as photographic artist. Provenance: Eldon Grupp.

Condition
Some scuffing and wear to covers front cover detached as is the title-page; modest fading to some images, gernerally quite clean and rich overall, very good or better, a spectacular selection.
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Sun Pictures of Yosemite

Estimate $50,000 - $80,000
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Starting Price $40,000
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