Brett Weston first picked up a camera in Mexico as a
fourteen-year-old when he spent several months there with his father
Edward in 1924, and
Baja California, made between 1964 and 1967,
demonstrates his love of Mexico and its unique light and natural forms.
The Baja portfolio has no text or picture titles and no predetermined
order, but the pictures in this portfolio, like those that came before
and after it, were carefully selected from hundreds of photographs for
their variety and continuity: Baja contains four relatively deep-space
landscapes with horizons, one medium close-up, and several relatively
flat and abstract close-ups of sand, rocks, water, and plants.
The
term “lyric” is usually understood to refer to poetry that is meant to
be sung out loud, but it can also be applied to artworks in any medium
that have musical or rhythmic qualities. These photographs are the most
“lyrical” group Brett had created to date, and they pulsate with
joyful, organic rhythms.
12 1/2" x 12 1/2", 15 reproductions, 44 pages
Softbound, without subscription.
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