Paul Caponigro
The Flumes, Great Basin, White Mountains, New Hampshire by Paul Caponigro
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- Artwork Info
- About the Artist
- About this Photograph
- Artist News
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1960
Gelatin silver print mounted to period card
Signed, in pencil, au mount recto
Titled and dated, in pencil, au mount verso -
Born in Boston in 1932, Paul Caponigro is one of America’s foremost landscape photographers. While he became interested in photography at the age of thirteen, he also had a strong passion for music; he studied at Boston University College of Music in 1950 before deciding to focus on photography at the California School of Fine Art, where Ansel Adams had established one of the first photography programs in the United States. Despite the shift from music to photography early in his artistic career, Caponigro remains a dedicated piano player who believes that his musical training and insight influences his photographic imagery.
Caponigro is best known for his interest in natural forms, landscapes, and still lives. His subjects include Stonehenge and other Celtic megaliths of England and Ireland; the temples, shrines and sacred gardens of Japan; and the deep mystical woodland of New England. He had his first solo exhibition at the George Eastman House in 1958 and his work has been shown in numerous exhibitions throughout the United States and abroad. Throughout the 1960s he was a part-time teacher at Boston University while consulting on various technical research projects with the Polaroid Corporation. He has received two Guggenheim Fellowships and three National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) grants. In recognition of a career spanning nearly seventy years and a sustained, significant contribution to the art of photography, Caponigro was awarded The Royal Photographic Society’s Centenary Medal and Honorary Fellowship in 2001.
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This early photograph by Paul Caponigro is representative of this artist’s ongoing fascination with the geography of his New England homebase. The composition depicts a natural geographic feature being treated with an almost reverential significance via the lens of Caponigro’s camera. The diminutive scale of the print add a heightened sense of abstraction to the photograph.
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A Giant Among Photographers: Paul Caponigro - NBC, November 2019
Paul Caponigro’s Intensity of Serenity - Boston Globe, September 2013
Showcase - Channeling Caponigro - The New York Times, December 2009