Eliot Porter Born (1901)

Eliot Furness Porter was born on December 6, 1901 (died 1990).  He became one of the most renowned nature photographers of the 20th Century, compared in importance and skill to Ansel Adams, Paul Strand and Alfred Stieglitz.  Educated as a chemical engineer and medical doctor, he taught biochemistry at Harvard and Radcliffe College during the 1930s.

From an early age, Porter was fascinated by both nature and photography.  He was given his first camera at the age of ten and immediately began to photograph birds—a subject that became a lifelong obsession.  While teaching college he continued to refine his photographic skills, focusing on the black-and-white palette that defined artistic photography of the times.  In 1938, the influential photographer Alfred Stieglitz offered Porter a one-person show at his New York gallery.  The success of that show convinced Porter to abandon teaching in favor of a career as a professional photographer.  He moved to New Mexico and began to chronicle the southwestern landscape.

A photo of a male American Redstart by Eliot Porter for a US National Museum bulletin, 1945

At the time, Kodak was marketing its first popular color film—Kodachrome.  Although color photography was scoffed at by serious photographers, Porter embraced the innovation.  He perfected intricate processes for printing color images.  His use of color ushered in the modern era of photography.  Ansel Adams described Porter as “master of nature’s color.”

Porter also brought a new perspective to the nature photograph.  Rather than the sweeping, majestic landscapes of Ansel Adams, Porter concentrated on the small, the familiar, even the insignificant.   A group of fallen leaves, a collection of pebbles gathered on a sand bar, or the pattern of mineral veining in a rock wall were the kind of subjects he admired and photographed.  He was particularly fond of lichens, the partnership of fungus and algae that colonizes rocks and tree trunks.  “Sometimes,” he said, “you can tell a large story with a tiny subject.”  A critic described his work this way:

“Mr. Porter’s eye is less for the grand sweep than for details of running water, iridescent pools, rock walls, rock textures, caverns, violent twists of sandstone, lichens, willows, leafy trees. He looks for the grand truth in the minute. It is the color that conveys the grandeur. Purples, blues, reds, yellows, oranges — all of them overlaid with metallic brilliance — compose natural beauty of overwhelming vitality.”

            He recognized that photography could be used for political purposes, and he put its influence to work on behalf of the burgeoning environmental movement of the 1960s.  “Photography is a strong tool, a propaganda device, and a weapon for the defense of the environment….”  He formed a winning partnership with David Brower, the longtime leader of The Sierra Club.  In 1962, The Sierra Club issued a book of Porter’s photographs accompanying quotes from Henry David Thoreau—In Wildness is the Preservation of the World.  The book was an instant success, a masterpiece of photography, aesthetic design and printing technology; it virtually created the coffee-table book genre.  His second book, displaying photographs of the Glen Canyon taken just before it was flooded by closure of the Glen Canyon Dam, is considered the impetus for passage of The Wilderness Act of 1964.

References:

Amon Carter Museum.  Eliot Porter Collection Guide.  Available at:  http://www.cartermuseum.org/collections/porter/about.php.  Accessed December 5, 2016.

Honan, William.  1990.  Eliot Porter, Photographer, is Dead at 88.  New York Times, November 3, 1990.  Available at:  http://www.nytimes.com/1990/11/03/obituaries/eliot-porter-photographer-is-dead-at-88.html.  Accessed December 5, 2016.

International Center of Photography.  Eliot Porter.  Available at:  https://www.icp.org/browse/archive/constituents/eliot-porter?all/all/all/all/0.  Accessed December 5, 2016.

  1. Paul Getty Museum. Eliot Porter. Available at:  http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/artists/1426/eliot-porter-american-1901-1990/. Accessed December 5, 2016.

Solnit, Rebecca.  2002.  In Photography is the Preservation of the World.  Sierra Magazine, September/October 2002.  The Sierra Club, San Francisco, CA.  Available at:  https://vault.sierraclub.org/sierra/200209/porter.asp.  Accessed December 5, 2016.

This Month in Conservation

May 1
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May 2
“Peter and The Wolf” Premieres (1936)
May 3
Vagn Walfrid Ekman, Swedish Oceanographer, Born (1874)
May 4
Eugenie Clark, The Shark Lady, Born (1922)
May 5
Frederick Lincoln, Pioneer of Bird Banding, Born (1892)
May 6
Lassen Volcanic National Park Created (1907)
May 7
Nature’s Best Moms
May 8
David Attenborough Born (1926)
May 9
Thames River Embankments Completed (1874)
May 10
Birute Galdikas, Orangutan Expert, Born (1946)
May 11
“HMS Beagle” Launched (1820)
May 12
Farley Mowat, Author of “Never Cry Wolf,” Born (1921)
May 13
St. Lawrence Seaway Authorized (1954)
May 14
Lewis and Clark Expedition Began (1804)
May 15
Declaration of the Conservation Conference (1908)
May 16
Ramon Margalef, Pioneering Ecologist, Born (1919)
May 17
Australian BioBanking for Biodiversity Implemented (2010)
May 18
Mount St. Helens Erupts (1980)
May 19
Carl Akeley, Father of Modern Taxidermy, Born (1864)
May 20
European Maritime Day
May 21
Rio Grande Water-Sharing Convention Signed (1906)
May 22
International Day for Biological Diversity
May 23
President Carter Delivers Environmental Message to Congress (1977)
May 24
Bison Again Roam Free in Canada’s Grasslands National Park (2006)
May 25
Lacey Act Created (1900)
May 26
Last Model T Rolls Off the Assembly Line (1927)
May 27
Rachel Carson, Author of “Silent Spring,” Born (1907)
May 27
A Day for the birds
May 28
Sierra Club Founded (1892)
May 29
Stephen Forbes, Pioneering Ecologist, Born (1844)
May 30
Everglades National Park Created (1934)
May 31
The Johnstown Flood (1889)
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