
Edward Weston was born in 1886 in Highland Park, Illinois. When he was
sixteen years old his father gave him a Kodak Bulls-Eye #2 camera and he began
to photograph at his aunt's farm and in Chicago parks. In 1903 Weston first had
his photographs exhibited at the Chicago Art Institute. Soon after the San
Francisco earthquake and fire on April 19, 1906, Weston came to California to
work as a surveyor for San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad. For a
short while Weston returned to Chicago and attended the Illinois College of
Photography, but came back to California to live in 1908 where he became a
founding member of the Camera Pictorialists of Los Angeles.
He married Flora Chandler in 1909 and they soon gave birth to two sons: Edward
Chandler Weston, in 1910 and Theodore Brett Weston in 1911. Weston had his own
portrait studio in Tropico, California and also began to have articles published
in magazines such as American Photography, Photo Era and Photo-Miniature where
his article entitled "Weston's Methods" on unconventional portraiture appeared
in September, 1917.
Weston's third son, Laurence Neil Weston, was born in 1916 and his fourth, Cole Weston, in 1919. Soon after Weston met Tina Modotti which marked the starting point of their long relationship, photographic collaborations in Mexico and later much publicized love affair. Modotti's husband, a political radical in Mexico, died in 1922. That same year Weston traveled to Ohio to visit his sister and there took photographs of the Armco Steel Plant.

From Ohio he went to New York and met Alfred Stieglitz, Paul Strand, Charles
Sheeler and Georgia O'Keefe. At this time Weston renounced Pictorialism and
began a period of transition, self-analysis and self-discipline while making
voyages to Mexico, often with Modotti and one of his sons. Some of the
photographs that he and Modotti made in Mexico were published in Anita Brenner's
book Idols Behind Altars. Weston began photographing shells, vegetables and
nudes in 1927. Weston kept very detailed journals or "Day Books" of his daily
activities, thoughts, ideas and conversations. His first publication of these
writings "From My Day Book" appeared in 1928 - others were published after his
death.
Two years later he had his first New York exhibit at Alma Reed's Delphic Studios
Gallery and later exhibited at Harvard Society of Contemporary Arts with Walker
Evans, Eugene Atget, Sheeler, Stieglitz, Modotti and others. Weston was a
Charter member of the "Group f/64" that was started in 1932 and included Ansel
Adams, Imogen Cunningham, Consuelo Kanaga and others. They chose this optical
term because they habitually set their lenses to that aperture to secure maximum
image sharpness of both foreground and distance. Weston went even further toward
photographic purity in 1934 when he resolved to make only unretouched portraits.
Even though several large exhibitions followed, he was still of modest means and
in 1935 initiated the "Edward Weston Print of the Month Club" offering
photographs at $10 each.

In 1937 he was the first photographer to be awarded a Guggenheim fellowship
taking his assistant Charis Wilson along on his travels whom he married the next
year. In 1940 the book California and the West was published with text by Charis
and photographs by Edward. The same year he participated in the U.S. Camera
Yosemite Photographic Forum with Ansel Adams and Dorthea Lange.
In 1941 he was commissioned by Limited Editions Club to illustrate a new edition
of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass. Weston started experiencing symptoms of
Parkinson's disease in 1946 and in 1948 made his last photographs at Point
Lobos. In 1952 his Fiftieth Anniversary Portfolio was published with his images
printed by Brett.
In 1955 Weston selected several of what he called "Project Prints" and began having Brett, Cole and Dody Warren print them under his supervision. Lou Stoumen released his film The Naked Eye in 1956 of which he used several of Weston's print as well as footage of Weston himself. Edward Weston died at home on January 1, 1958.
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