The landscape is one of Callahan's central themes in a remarkably diverse career in photography that includes portraiture, architecture, and street photography. Here, studying the Chicago beach as if it were a Zen garden, Callahan focuses on the delicate surf line, two or three stones, and the cone-shaped interference patterns created by water returning back to the lake. The elegant simplicity and planarity of the photographs (representative of Callahan's earliest work) suggests a reading of the subtle rhythms that develop in the intervals between the pictures. The work evokes a sense of quiet contemplation, formal perfection, and perhaps even material transcendence.
A masterpiece from the period of Callahan's interest in Japanese minimalism, it was made in the year he began teaching at Chicago's Institute of Design (formerly, the New Bauhaus). Callahan wrote for "New Photographers," a contemporaneous traveling exhibition (1946–48) organized by the Museum of Modern Art, that he hoped his work would contain "a small pattern of my feeling about living." These exquisite photographs are material revelations of the artist's intentions.
Artist; private collector; [Paul Hertzmann, San Francisco]; [Pace Wildenstein MacGill, New York]
Signature: Signed in ink on mount, verso, top left corner: "Harry M. Callahan"
Inscriptions: Inscribed in ink on mount, verso, top left corner: "Harry M. Callahan // 1946 // #1"; printed, typed, and inscribed museum loan label affixed to mount, verso, center: "MUSEUM OF MODERN ART // 11 WEST 53RD STREET, NEW YORK CITY // Harry M. Callahan // 2416 Lake View North // Chicago 14, Illinois // Loan direct from photographer // 47.732A"; dealer's inscription in pencil on mount, verso, bottom left corner: "HC37269-c"
This is the left-hand picture of a triptych, which also includes 1996.291b and c.