🎉 Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
HomeStore

"An Oasis in the Badland" by Edward Sheriff Curtis Goldtone

Product image 1
1 / 6
+1

"An Oasis in the Badland" by Edward Sheriff Curtis Goldtone

"An Oasis in the Badland" by Edward Curtis Centennial edition goldtone 12/75; 8" x 10", Negative date 1905, print date 1999. Framed 15" x 13". This original Goldtone photograph is hand-produced from a vintage negative by Edward S. Curtis. It was printed by the Curtis Centennial Project, Inc. in 1999. Edard Sheriff Curtis (1868-1952) was one of this country’s preeminent photographers and created a body of work that is absolutely unparallel in the history of photography and ethnography. Curtis was a pioneer of the Goldtone (or orotone) process and its most ardent proponent. He wrote of the process: The ordinary photographic print, however good, lacks depth, lacks transparency, or more strictly speaking, lacks translucency. We all know how beautiful the stone and pebbles are in a limpid brook of the forest where the water absorbs the blue of the sky and the green of the foliage. Yet when we take the same iridescent pebbles from the water and dry them they are dull and lifeless. So it is with the orthodox photographic print, but in the orotone all the translucency is retained, and they are as full of life and sparkle as an opal. Curtis Centennial Project has itself pioneered many new techniques and processes in producing its Goldtones and is now, after over three years of experimentation, able to produce Goldtones that are unparalleled in their beauty, consistency and archival stability.

PERIOD: Late 20th Century

ORIGIN: Minnesota, United States

SIZE: 8" x 10" frame 15" x 13"

"An Oasis in the Badland" by Edward Curtis Centennial edition goldtone 12/75; 8" x 10", Negative date 1905, print date 1999. Framed 15" x 13". This original Goldtone photograph is hand-produced from a vintage negative by Edward S. Curtis. It was printed by the Curtis Centennial Project, Inc. in 1999. Edard Sheriff Curtis (1868-1952) was one of this country’s preeminent photographers and created a body of work that is absolutely unparallel in the history of photography and ethnography. Curtis was a pioneer of the Goldtone (or orotone) process and its most ardent proponent. He wrote of the process: The ordinary photographic print, however good, lacks depth, lacks transparency, or more strictly speaking, lacks translucency. We all know how beautiful the stone and pebbles are in a limpid brook of the forest where the water absorbs the blue of the sky and the green of the foliage. Yet when we take the same iridescent pebbles from the water and dry them they are dull and lifeless. So it is with the orthodox photographic print, but in the orotone all the translucency is retained, and they are as full of life and sparkle as an opal. Curtis Centennial Project has itself pioneered many new techniques and processes in producing its Goldtones and is now, after over three years of experimentation, able to produce Goldtones that are unparalleled in their beauty, consistency and archival stability.

PERIOD: Late 20th Century

ORIGIN: Minnesota, United States

SIZE: 8" x 10" frame 15" x 13"

$1,750.00

Original: $5,000.00

-65%
"An Oasis in the Badland" by Edward Sheriff Curtis Goldtone—

$5,000.00

$1,750.00

Description

"An Oasis in the Badland" by Edward Curtis Centennial edition goldtone 12/75; 8" x 10", Negative date 1905, print date 1999. Framed 15" x 13". This original Goldtone photograph is hand-produced from a vintage negative by Edward S. Curtis. It was printed by the Curtis Centennial Project, Inc. in 1999. Edard Sheriff Curtis (1868-1952) was one of this country’s preeminent photographers and created a body of work that is absolutely unparallel in the history of photography and ethnography. Curtis was a pioneer of the Goldtone (or orotone) process and its most ardent proponent. He wrote of the process: The ordinary photographic print, however good, lacks depth, lacks transparency, or more strictly speaking, lacks translucency. We all know how beautiful the stone and pebbles are in a limpid brook of the forest where the water absorbs the blue of the sky and the green of the foliage. Yet when we take the same iridescent pebbles from the water and dry them they are dull and lifeless. So it is with the orthodox photographic print, but in the orotone all the translucency is retained, and they are as full of life and sparkle as an opal. Curtis Centennial Project has itself pioneered many new techniques and processes in producing its Goldtones and is now, after over three years of experimentation, able to produce Goldtones that are unparalleled in their beauty, consistency and archival stability.

PERIOD: Late 20th Century

ORIGIN: Minnesota, United States

SIZE: 8" x 10" frame 15" x 13"

You may also like

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

The Shadows of The Night

$4,000.00

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

The Shootout by Jim Carkhuff

$3,500.00

$1,225.00

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

"This Land is Our Land" by Jim Carkhuff

$1,500.00

$525.00

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Stallion by Jim Carkhuff

$550.00

$192.50

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Crossing the Plains by Jim Carkhuff

$1,200.00

$420.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Land of Plenty by Jim Carkhuff

$2,500.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Sentinel of the Plains by Jim Carkhuff

$700.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Lone Eagle by Jim Carkhuff

$400.00

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

The Denizens of the Plains by Jim Carkhuff

$2,500.00

$875.00

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Trail Drive by Jim Carkhuff

$550.00

$192.50

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Coming Home Late by Jim Carkhuff

$700.00

$245.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Facing the Storm by Jim Carkhuff

$2,000.00