Ask about our zero-interest payment plans! Our website looks its best on Chrome and Firefox.
Call
1-416-639-1512
Contact
team@ffoto.com
Store info

Monday to Friday

9AM - 5PM

Directions

1356 Dundas St W,

Toronto, ON, M6J 1Y2

1356 Dundas St W,

Toronto, ON, M6J 1Y2

Monday to Friday

9AM - 5PM

John Vanderpant

Winter's Architecture by John Vanderpant

$5,000 USD
Size
Stephen Bulger Gallery ( Toronto, ON)
Need help? Call or text us at (416) 639-1512.
Learn about our Shipping & Returns policy.
Have a question? Read our FAQ.
  • Artwork Info
  • About the Artist
  • About this Photograph
  • circa 1931
    Gelatin silver print mounted to single-ply period board
    Signed and titled, in pencil, au recto
    Printed circa 1931
    Unframed

  • John Vanderpant (1884 – 1939) is among Canada’s premier Modernist photographers. He produced his most important work in the 1920s and 30s. During these years, photography provided an important link between the artistic forefront and an emerging technological culture. Vanderpant took up the Modernist challenge, moving away from a soft-focused pictorial aesthetic to create sharply focused photographs of natural and industrial patterns and structures, such as his series Grain Elevators (1926–1936). He organized many photography exhibitions at his studio in New Westminster and later in Vancouver. He exhibited the work of Group f/64 photographers Imogen Cunningham and Edward Weston, as well as local artists.

    – Adapted from: Art Gallery of Ontario

  • This photograph is representative of Vanderpant’s approach to photography, which embraced a stripped down, modernist aesthetic that favoured a more “straight” style of photography above pictorialism. Often spiritually motivated, his pictures incorporated out-of-context close-ups, unusual angles, soft tones, and dramatic lighting to convey the sensual beauty of everyday objects like flowers, fruits, vegetables, and items of clothing. He would then crop, dodge, enlarge, or retouch an image to convey his “ideas in light”.