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Edward Henry Weston was born March 24, 1886, in Highland Park, Illinois. He began photographing at the age of sixteen after receiving a Bull¡¯s Eye #2 camera from his father. Weston¡¯s first photographs captured the parks of Chicago and his aunt¡¯s farm. In 1906, following the publication of his first photograph in Camera and Darkroom, Weston moved to California.

 

In 1922 Weston visited the ARMCO Steel Plant in Middletown, Ohio. The photographs taken here marked a turning point in Weston¡¯s career. During this period, Weston renounced his Pictorialism style with a new emphasis on abstract form and sharper resolution of detail. The industrial photographs were true straight images: unpretentious, and true to reality. Weston later wrote, ¡°The camera should be used for a recording of life, for rendering the very substance and quintessence of the thing itself, whether it be polished steel or palpitating flesh.¡±

 

Weston became the first photographer to receive a Guggenheim Fellowship for experimental work in 1936. Following the receipt of this fellowship Weston spent the next two years taking photographs in the West and Southwest United States with assistant and future wife Charis Wilson.

 

Weston began experiencing symptoms of Parkinson¡¯s disease in 1946 and in 1948 shot his last photograph of Point Lobos. In 1946 the Museum of Modern Art, New York featured a major retrospective of 300 prints of Weston¡¯s work. Over the next 10 years of progressively incapacitating illness, Weston supervised the printing of his prints by his sons, Brett and Cole.

 

Edward Weston died on January 1, 1958 at his home, Wildcat Hill, in Carmel, California. Weston's ashes were scattered into the Pacific Ocean at Pebbly Beach at Point Lobos.

 

(Retrieved from https://www.edward-weston.com/edward_weston_biography.htm)

 

 

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