Gary Saretzky Photo Books
Vantage Point: Photographs from the Warren J. Coville Collection, February 5 through April 5, 1992.
Vantage Point: Photographs from the Warren J. Coville Collection, February 5 through April 5, 1992.
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Cranbrook Academy of Art Museum, 1992. By David Rau, Warren J. Coville (interview), Roy Slade and Thomas Halsted. Exhibition catalog. Photographs by Josef Sudek; Dwight A. Davis; Henri Cartier-Bresson; Andre Kertesz; Walker Evans; Laura Gilpin; Alfred Cohn; Rudolf Eickemeyer, Jr; Imogen Cunningham; Ralston Crawford; W. Eugene Smith; Anton Bruehl; Warren J. Coville (self-portrait); August Sander; Brassai; Gertrude Kasebier; Lewis W. Hine; Margaret Bourke-White; Matsy Wynn Richards; Clarence White & Alfred Stieglitz; Stella Simon; Paul Outerbridge, Jr.; Edward Steichen; Alfred Stieglitz; Harry Callahan; Karl Struss; Paul Strand; Ralph Steiner; Garry Winogrand; Edward Weston; Lazlo Moholy-Nagy; Katherine Dunham; and Charles Sheeler. Wraps with die-cut windows, 32 pages. Fine except front cover beginning to curl. Includes exhibition checklist. Illustrations include one photograph per artist or collaborators in the exhibit. Summary:
Vantage Point: Photographs from the Warren J. Coville Collection was a photography exhibition held from February 5 through April 5, 1992, highlighting a curated selection of masterworks from a prominent private collection.
Key Features of the Exhibition
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A Survey of 20th-Century Photography: The exhibition offered a comprehensive look at the evolution of the medium, spanning diverse movements from Pictorialism and Modernism to Photojournalism.
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Renowned Artists: The showcase featured an impressive lineup of iconic historical and contemporary photographers, including Henri Cartier-Bresson, Alfred Stieglitz, Edward Steichen, Edward Weston, Imogen Cunningham, Walker Evans, André Kertész, László Moholy-Nagy, Margaret Bourke-White, and Garry Winogrand.
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Thematic Focus: The collection reflected a keen eye for definitive imagery, celebrating both the technical mastery and artistic innovation of the camera across the 20th century.
- The exhibition served as a testament to Coville's keen curatorial eye and deep philanthropic commitment to the photographic arts, a legacy expanded in later decades through major donations to institutions like the Library of Congress and the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art.
