Roger Fenton (English, 1819-1869)
"Afternoon," 1856
Salt print from a collodion negative
20.6 x 42.1 cm, top corners rounded
Fenton's clouds are the defining core of his extraordinary landscapes, in much the same way as those of Constable, who in a letter described the sky as both "the keynote" and "the chief organ of sentiment" in landscape painting, adding that "[the] landscape painter who does not make skies a very material part of his composition neglects to avail himself of one of his greatest aids. The sky is the source of light in nature and governs everything." Deeply inspired by Constable's cloud studies and Turner's explorations of atmosphere and light, Fenton's rendition of clouds and sky is an intensely felt meditation on nature which seems to hover between the visible and the imagined while manifesting a reverence for the observable world.
The preeminent British photographer of the 1850s, Fenton advocated the medium's place among the fine arts and mastered all its genres. This salt print, boldly signed in ink, is on par with both renowned Fenton cloud studies from the Rubel Collection now at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and, like the other two, is unique.