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What is it about these evocative images, that they impel an almost automatic response: the
relaxed, unfocused gaze of remembrance and daydreams?
Perhaps that is what draws me to these images. They float into the present moment like a vapor. They speak in a whisper, both ephemeral and urgent, about something half-remembered, half-dreamed. They inspire questions and musings about our experience of place, both past and present.
Perhaps that is what draws me to these images. They float into the present moment like a vapor. They speak in a whisper, both ephemeral and urgent, about something half-remembered, half-dreamed. They inspire questions and musings about our experience of place, both past and present.
Morris’s photographs are full of mystery, lost language, and
people long gone from this earth. A
ghostly trace of a shadow drifts past the woman. What draws the boy’s gaze? Yet the stark geometry of the landscape provides a familiar anchor, a connection to the here and now. By uniting earth, sea, and sky into a sharp
point, Morris creates a composition that is timeless and universal, at least on
our Earth. It's an instantly recognizable expression of place: the seaside.
Woman and dog in boat, Sea Girt Marriott C. Morris Collection [P.2013.13.142] |
My sketch of a Morris image. Words in place of objects, and just three lines are all that is needed to convey a very specific sense of place. |
His photographs are composed with deliberation, and these mute, “permeable” images have a strong voice that carries through time. I like to think of them as encoded transmissions. Most came into the collections at the Library Company of Philadelphia in the form of glass-plate and film negatives, essentially unintelligible and inaccessible. Through the mediums of light, paper, and digital imaging, images of past-place have been decoded.
Boat
"Scythian New York" adorned with several flags sailing among several
vessels
Marriott C. Morris Collection [*P.9895.13.2] |
Three masted
schooner "Vanname & King" from beach
Marriott C. Morris Collection [P.9895.1025] “Looking into the sun”
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Only partly decoded though. These photographs give rise to musings about communication, context, and the transmission of ideas. A common enough sight in the late 19th-century, but to describe them in words today would require a fair bit of historical research. What is the term for that particular form of boat, or the meaning behind the symbols on the flags? What are they saying to us, humankind, in the 21st century?
The Samuels'
canoe. Mr. S. [Samuel], Patty Mellor, & Eli K. Price in it. [Sea Girt, NJ]
Marriott C. Morris Collection [P.9895.1151]
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Through the process of digitizing the negatives, the effect
of time is revealed in the imprint. In some cases creating an unintended conceptual
overlay to Morris’s images. The
cracked, curled, and missing emulsion reads as a patterned web that obscures the view, just as time obscures memory, and so it goes. These images, and the thoughts they provoke about place and the
passage of time, serve as both fingerpost and inspiration for my visual art.
Beyond the donation of images, the Morris Family has generously,
and wisely, provided the funds required for the digitization and record-level cataloging of the entire collection, work undertaken by Project Assistant
Alison Van Denend. The artist continues to speak through
this collection which is now accessible to everyone here. I am
grateful!
Andrea Krupp, Conservator
Library Company of Philadelphia
Library Company of Philadelphia
August 2015
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