Guest blog by Suzanne Révy
Sam Wagstaff’s insatiable curiosity about the medium of photography sprang from viewing two printed versions of Edward Steichen’s The Flatiron on view in an exhibition called The Painterly Photograph at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1973. The curator of that show, Weston Naef, describes Wagstaff as being “mesmerized by these particular pieces because they represented the skillful combination of the handmade and the mechanical, the representational and the abstract, and the intellectual and the sensual.” Wagstaff’s former indifference to the medium of photography took a sudden, one hundred and eighty degree turn, and the pursuit was on.

Book cover of “The Thrill of the Chase: The Wagstaff Collection of Photographs at the J. Paul Getty Museum” by Paul Martineau. Photograph of “Rita de Acosta Lydig, 1914” gelatin silver print by Baron Adolf DeMeyer (courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).
The Thrill of the Chase: The Wagstaff Collection of Photographs at the J. Paul Getty Museum is a rich and captivating book that accompanies a traveling exhibition of the collection that will be on view at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut this fall and at the Portland Museum of Art in Maine opening in the winter of 2017. The book presents the collection in chronological order, and could be a solid primer for the history of photography, but there’s an additional quality and sensibility to the photographs in this collection that reveal something of Wagstaff’s own enigmatic persona.
![“American
[Portrait of a Seated Girl], about 1850” Daguerreotype by Unknown maker (courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles)](https://i0.wp.com/whatwillyouremember.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Unknown-Seated-Girl-865x1024.jpg?resize=865%2C1024&ssl=1)
“American [Portrait of a Seated Girl], about 1850” Daguerreotype by Unknown maker (courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles)
![“G[ustave] Doré, 1856 – 1858” Salted paper print
by Nadar [Gaspard Félix Tournachon] (French, 1820 - 1910) (courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).](https://i0.wp.com/whatwillyouremember.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Nadar-G-Dore-814x1024.jpg?resize=814%2C1024&ssl=1)
“G[ustave] Doré, 1856 – 1858” Salted paper print by Nadar [Gaspard Félix Tournachon] (French, 1820 – 1910) (courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).
![“[Dogs], mid - late 19th century” Albumen silver print by Léon Crémière (French, 1831 - after 1882) (courtesy of
the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).](https://i0.wp.com/whatwillyouremember.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Leon-Cremiere-Dogs.jpg?resize=500%2C339&ssl=1)
“[Dogs], mid – late 19th century” Albumen silver print by Léon Crémière (French, 1831 – after 1882) (courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).

“Looking down Yosemite Valley, about 1872” albumen silver print by Thomas Houseworth & Company, Carleton Watkins (American, 1829 – 1916), or C.L. Weed (American, 1824 – 1903), et al. (courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).

“Close, No. 193 High Street., negative 1868 – 1871; print 1877” Carbon print by Thomas Annan (Scottish,1829 – 1887) (courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).
In addition, Wagstaff’s collection includes a number of vernacular and anonymously made cartes des visites from the 19th century (see Feature Image). Other images that resonate for me are the beautifully atmospheric and lyrical Eclipse Dance by Edward S. Curtis, Carl Moon’s tender Navajo Boy, Arnold Genthe’s touching portrait of Edna St. Vincent Millay amid the blossoms of early spring, and though I’ve never been a particular fan of the work of Martin Munkácsi, his Dromedaries in the Berlin Zoo is extraordinary. In studying this exceptional collection, it becomes obvious that Wagstaff’s own impassioned and visual sensibility echoes consistently in the emotional timbre of the work. The collection becomes a portrait of the collector.

“Eclipse Dance, 1910-1914” gelatin silver print by Edward S. Curtis (courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).

“Navajo Boy, 1907” gelatin silver print by Carl Moon (courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).

“Edna St. Vincent Millay, c. 1917” toned gelatin silver print by Arnold Genthe (American, 1869-1942) (courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).

“Dromedaries in the Berlin Zoo, 1930” gelatin silver print by Martin Munkásci (American, born in Hungary 1896-1963), (courtesy of Estate of Martin Mukásci, Howard Greenberg Gallery, N.Y. and the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).

Book cover for “The Unseen Eye: Photographs from the Unconscious” by W.M. Hunt (Aperture, 2011). Photograph “Untitled, 2004” digital C print from the series “Domestic Stages” by Carrie Levy (American b. 1979), (courtesy of the artist).
Wagstaff’s collection gave me the excuse to finally purchase a book I’ve long coveted by a contemporary collector. W.M. Hunt’s The Unseen Eye, (Aperture, 2011) is another excellent example of a broad interest in the medium of photography through the lens of a singular and particular vision of a collector. In the preface, Hunt describes the collection as a manifestation of his unconscious, that each picture serves as a portrait of him and he suggests that the pictures in the collection will be revealed as portraits of his readers, as well. It’s a big, beautiful book, and opens with a gorgeous picture by Nathan Lerner from 1940 called Eye and Finger.

“Eye and Finger, 1940” gelatin silver print by Nathan Lerner (courtesy of the artist’s estate and Stephen Daiter Gallery, Chicago).

“Boy Behind a Piece of Glass, 1966” gelatin silver print by Ralph Eugene Meatyard (courtesy of the artist’s estate and Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco).
Equally captivated by both historic and contemporary photography, Hunt deftly sequences disparate works into a cohesive vision with a theme in which the eyes of those portrayed are hidden, obscured, averted or simply closed. Leafing through the pages of this book is a psychological journey through a broadly emotional range. There is the charming humor of a trio Ralph Eugene Meatyard images, including a blurry ghost and a boy facing away from the camera into a tree that appears to want to swallow him up or the wonderful row of rear ends in Frank Sutcliffe’s Excitement.

“Excitement (Stern Reality), 1888” carbon print by Frank Sutcliffe (courtesy of the artist’s estate).

“Terrorist Attack (The Falling Man), September 11, 2001” by Richard Drew (courtesy of AP Worldwide Photos).
In addition to humor there are deeply disturbing images in the form of a seated headless cadaver in Joel Peter Witkin’s Man without a Head or Richard Drew’s Terrorist Attack (The Falling Man), depicting a victim plunging to his death during the September 11th attacks on the World Trade Center. Many pictures are intriguingly mysterious: a lesser known Cindy Sherman, Untitled No. 105 (1982), which Hunt describes as “unusually subdued and discrete…”, Imogen Cunningham’s Veiled Woman, Alexandra Boulat’s Shahima, and a very small image from the 19th century, Hooded performer on a wire by Fratelli Alinari that is both perplexing and totally engrossing.

“Untitled No. 105, 1982” Type C print by Cindy Sherman (courtesy of the artist).

“Veiled Woman, 1910/1975” by Imogen Cunningham (courtesy of the Imogen Cunningham Trust).

“Shahima, 2004” Type C print from the series “Modest Women in the Middle East” by Alexandra Boulat (courtesy of the artist’s estate).
Hunt offers his thoughts about different pictures throughout the book, and in one such paragraph early in the book, he describes collecting photographs as a “visceral experience: you know you have found one that you have to acquire when the hair on the back of your neck stands on end, your heart pounds and you cannot move your feet.” Collecting seems to be an intense, obsessive force, one that bears a striking resemblance to the deep need of photographers like me to make pictures. I recognize that heart racing palpitation that arises when I’ve got my shot. In poring over these two absorbing collections over the last few weeks of summer, I am persuaded that both Wagstaff and Hunt are artists, and they have shown me that artists and collectors are two sides of the same coin.
Suzanne Révy is a Boston-based fine art photographer whose work is represented by Panopticon Gallery. She writes the blog, A Grain of Sand. To learn more about Suzanne’s work, go to: http://www.suzannerevy.com/ OR http://www.panopticongallery.com/artist/suzanne_revy/#Suzanne_Revy_40.jpg

“Hooded Man on a Wire, 19th C.” albumen print by Fratelli Alinari
The Thrill of the Chase:The Wagstaff Collection of Photographs at the J. Paul Getty Museum
by Paul Martineau
With an essay by Eugenia Parry
and an introduction by Weston Naef
Published by the J. Paul Getty Museum
Los Angeles, 2016
The exhibition will be on view at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, CT from September 10th through December 11th 2016 and at the Portland Museum of Art in Maine from February 3rd through April 17th, 2017. https://thewadsworth.org/exhibitions/the-thrill-of-the-chase/
The Unseen Eye:
Photographs from the Unconscious
by W.M. Hunt
with an introduction by William Ewing
published by Aperture
New York, 2011
http://aperture.org/shop/the-unseen-eye-2650
Feature Image: “Photographing New York City – on a slender support 18 stories above pavement of Fifth Avenue, 1905” (Detail) gelatin silver print by Underwood & Underwood (courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).
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