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©John Pfahl
John Pfahl
American (b. 1939)
HORSESHOE FALLS WITH SPRING ICE from the ARCADIA REVISITED series
of photographs of Niagara Falls (1985)
41 Ektacolor color-coupler prints
vary from 14" x 17" to 16" x 20"
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In 1982, the Castellani Art Museum of
Niagara University accepted an etching portfolio by artist Amos W.
Sangster (1833-1903) entitled The Niagara River and Falls from
Lake Erie to Lake Ontario. A gift from the Bethlehem Steel Corporation
of Lackawanna, New York, this monumental portfolio contains fifty
full-plate etchings 103 vignettes, and a 36,000 word commentary on
the history of the Niagara Frontier by James Warner Ward.
A Niagara Falls-based committee, formed to help research and publicize
the Sangster portfolio, decided to commission an internationally renowned
photographer to create a contemporary series of landscape photographs
that would closely parallel Sangsters etchings of the entire
span of the Niagara River. The committee publicized this intention
and received a wide variety of proposals from a number of photographers.
They eventually decided to entrust the project to photographer John
Pfahl, who had long been investigating nineteenth century pictorial
conventions in such exquisite landscape portfolios as Power Places
(1983), Picture Windows (1981), Altered Landscapes (1976)
, and other works. With a grant from the Visual Artists Program of
the New York State Council on the Arts, the Castellani Art Museum
commissioned Pfahl to photograph the river over a period of nine months
during 1985-86.
Pfahl attempted to use the working methods of Amos Sangster as closely
as possible, spending many days hiking along the Niagara River, finding
his vantage points, and, most important, approaching his subject with
the same reverent appreciation of the Niagara scene and painterly
aesthetic evinced by Sangster. The photographs that result are serenely
picturesque vistas, incorporating a sense of the awesome and sublime
that belongs to Pfahls own, uniquely spiritual attitude toward
nature. Fifty-two horizontal Kodak Ektacolor color-coupler prints
were produced. |
CRITICAL EXCERPTS
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Pfahl artist statement for Arcadia Revisited,
Santa Fe University Press, 7/85
"Before I even began to photograph, I immersed myself in
all the historical, geographic, and aesthetic data on the river
I could find...Would it still be possible to find the nineteenth
century lurking in forgotten corners, bypassed by the exigencies
of modern time? And, much more practically, would these magical
places still be accessible or would they be blocked by that modern
nemesis of photography, the chain-link fence?...Indeed, certain
areas, most notably around Goat Island, had even reverted from a
melange of paper mills and tourist snares to a more natural, even
idyllic appearance...Even the later panoramas were effortlessly
organized into familiar European conventions as if the river, in
some time-jumbling way, were the progenitor for all those idyllic
schemata that have been passed from one era and continent to the
next...Almost every photograph contains at least one revealing detail
that anchors the scene securely in the present...The Niagara River
is well known to be one of the most toxic waterways on the continent.
Its banks glisten with overt and covert seepage of the most deadly
persuasion. There is an almost unbearable irony to the act of recording
an achingly romantic meeting of shadowy forest and luminous water
while suffering the stench of untreated sewage dripping nearby...Perhaps
these devastating issues are peripheral to the thrust of this body
of work and can best be confronted in other venues, but disquieting
thoughts will inevitably figure into the ultimate meaning of these
images."
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Estelle Jussim, Arcadian Vistas: John Pfahl's Niagara,
in Arcadia Revisited, Santa Fe University Press, 7/85
"Pfahl carries the idea of the picturesque vista to new
heights of charm....Anybody who has tried to make significant landscape
pictures in any medium knows that the landscape is a most difficult
subject...That photographs contain pictorial ideas is not surprising,
but it takes someone with the talent of a John Pfahl to render the
pleasures of the image immediately accessible while the pictorial
strategy remains the framework unconsciously perceived...Pfahl's
imagery incorporates the awesome and the sublime with the beautiful,
all ingeniously combined in the late nineteenth century formula
for the picturesque view...He talks about some of the Niagara pictures
as if they were stages ready for the actors to perform within a
proscenium arch...With the camera as the ideal instrument for stopping
time, Pfahl frequently evokes the dream quality associated with
timeless Arcadia, where all is peaceful and joyous, and where the
human race lives in harmony with nature."
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