Scroll down below to explore the latest posts from our daily collecting guide, Peter's quotes, notes and reflections from forty years of collecting and dealing in photography. Started during lockdown and continued by popular demand for over three years now, daily posts are sent by email to our mailing list subscribers, with live works for sale and related works to explore, as well as advance previews of exhibitions and events.
Access the previous 800 posts in our archive pages starting in March 2020 here
Use the #tags below right to search by category and subject. If there is a particular subject, era, style or artist of interest, please contact our concierge service for a tailor-made private view.
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#1327 - Gifts for Dad - Elliott Erwitt
Provence, France (Boy on Bicycle), 1955“As fathers, we need to be involved in our children’s lives not just when it’s convenient or easy, and not just when they’re doing well — but when it's difficult and thankless, and they’re struggling. That is when they need us most.”
~Barack Obama -
#1325 - Wynn Bullock
Driftwood, 1951In the still picture, a deeply paradoxical truth exists. Objects can be frozen in time in terms of their specific physical, external qualities, but the mind can respond to these same objects as events in time. This involves, of course, the skill of the photographer in expressing symbolically three dimensional objects and four dimensional time, and the awareness of the viewer that permits him to recognize and respond to the symbols that create the illusion.
~ Wynn BullockThis photograph was taken during the same family road trip that produced "Child in Forest". The day was cool and misty and we had the beach all to ourselves. Mom and I were hunting for driftwood and shells while Dad was lugging his 8x10 view camera around just in case…. Although what he found wasn’t something we could cart home with us to put in the garden, he did win the prize for the most spectacular find of the day!
~ Barbara Bullock-Wilson -
#1326 - Lee Friedlander
New York City (Shadow), 1966“You don't have to go looking for pictures. The material is generous. You go out and the pictures are staring at you”
~ Lee Friedlander -
#1324 - Larry Towell
Lambton County, Ontario, Canada , 1990"If there's one theme that connects all my work, I think it's that of landlessness; how land makes people into who they are and what happens to them when they lose it and thus lose their identities"
~ Larry Towell
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#1323 - D.J. Ruzicka
New York (Rockefeller Center), c. 1930s"I believe in the dignity of labor, whether with head or hand; that the world owes no man a living but that it owes every man an opportunity to make a living."
~ John D Rockefeller
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#1322 - Pentti Sammallahti
Marmaris, Turkey, 2000“He was not bone and feather but a perfect idea of freedom and flight, limited by nothing at all”
~ Richard Bach
(Jonathan Livingston Seagull) -
#1321 - Gifts for Dad - William Heick
Hats, Father's Day Picnic, 1948“She did not stand alone, but what stood behind her, the most potent moral force in her life, was the love of her father.”
~ Harper Lee -
#1320 - Michael Kenna
Lotus Pond, Henjouson-in, Koyasan, 2006"As a photographer, one might, if very fortunate, be commissioned to photograph in a location that would otherwise be difficult to access. Such was the case in 2006 when Traveler Magazine kindly asked me to spend a week on Mt. Koya, (aka Koya San), the Honshu mountain top headquarters of the Shingon Buddhist sect. I stayed in a different residential temple every night, sleeping on tatami floors and dining on vegetables, roots and nuts. I photographed monks and pilgrims, inside and outside of temples, sand gardens, stone lanterns, tombstones in the ancient Okunoin graveyard, and the surrounding landscape. I experienced exquisite Buddhist rituals and services. The whole experience was thrilling and life changing.
This photograph of a Lotus Pond next to the Henjouson Temple was made one very early, pre-dawn morning. The light was soft and quiet, as if the day was just waking up from a deep sleep. The exposure was perhaps twenty minutes, so the water becomes a sort of mist, swirling around the one central point where water sprays into the air. I remember birds singing and monks chanting. Occasional figures walked by, across the bridge, but the long exposure ensured they dissolved and become invisible."~ Michael Kenna
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#1319 - Manuel Alvarez Bravo
Fruta Prohibida, 1976/printed c. 1980“I work for the pleasure of the work and everything else is a matter for the critics. I think that light and shadow have exactly the same duality that exists between life and death. When one takes a photograph one doesn’t think about saying anything in particular”
~ Manuel Alvarez Bravo
(1902-2002)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1318 - Louis Stettner
Aubervilliers, 1949/Printed Later“Looking back upon those early years in Paris I realize that not only was the city a great inspiration but also that the Parisians gave me the reassurance that I was doing something important. There was an innate respect for artists - for what we were doing and for having the courage to take the hard road. Yet it was a joyous route, such magnificent sights and human splendor along the way that difficulties magically effaced themselves. One regretted nothing and would have it no other way”
~ Louis Stettner
(1922-2016)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1317 - Anastasia Samoylova
Garden, Micanopy, 2020“The Garden in Micanopy belongs to a former pine farm turned mansion dating back to the 1840s. While working on my Floridas project, I arrived at the estate late in the evening to check into my rental room. It was pitch black outside; loud cicadas overpowered the sound of my car motor. Despite the tranquil setting, I couldn’t sleep all night due to the old house noises. Quite exhausted in the early morning, I was greeted by this serene yet somewhat ghostly scene. It reminded me of Victorian fairy pictures.”
~ Anastasia Samoylova -
#1316 - William Klein
Selwyn Theatre, 42nd Street, New York, 1955“Sometimes, I’d take shots without aiming, just to see what happened. I’d rush into crowds. It must be close to what a fighter feels after jabbing and circling and getting hit when suddenly there’s an opening and Bang! Bang! Right on the button. It’s fantastic feeling”
~ William Klein
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#1315 - Paul Cupido
Tree Ladder, 2019“I am to engage with the world with wide open senses. My work is about the magic moments of life as well as its inconveniences. I want to take pictures while forgetting about the process of photography until I’m saturated with an existential sense of life. Every step I take begins with the notion of “mono no aware", the transience of everything, the gentle melancholy of things being sensate to ephemera"
~ Paul Cupido
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#1314 - Flor Garduño
Taita Marcos, Cotacachi, Ecuador, 1988“My artistic quest is also a search for the characters in my dreams"
~ Flor Garduño
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#1312 - Michael Kenna
Kussharo Lake, Study 5, Hokkaido, Japan, 2002 (Printed 2013)"Perhaps the secret to being a productive photographer is just about showing up - being in the right place at the right time to record and/or interpret the miraculous beauty of our world. I have frequently visited and photographed around Kussharo Lake, more than most places in Japan. Set high up in the North East of Hokkaido, there is something alluring, attractive and mysterious about the place that consistently calls me back. No matter how many times I walk along its banks, the view is never the same, it changes and recharges every minute to reveal a continual stream of astonishingly beautiful new treasures and delights. On this particularly cold morning, the frozen ice combined with the natural hot spring water to produce clouds of white mist which rose behind black, inky trees. I was there at one of many “right" times and I knew that it would been very difficult to make a poor photograph. Having frequently returned to this location since, I have found, to my great satisfaction, there have been many other “right” times.."
~ Michael Kenna
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#1311 - Lillian Bassman
Dress by Thierry Mugler, German VOGUE, 1998“Photographing women is like capturing poetry in motion. Their beauty unfolds like verses and each frame reveals a new stanza of their story”
~ Lillian Bassman
(1917 - 2012)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1310 - Elliott Erwitt
New York City. 1982. 'Little girl looking out window', 1982“Something catches your eye or your interest. You attack it in one way or observe it in some way and try and put it in some kind of form and take a picture. It’s as simple as that”
~ Elliott Erwitt
(1928 - 2023)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1309 - William Klein
Nina, Isabella and Evelyn, New York, 1962“I’m known for fashion photography but in America, kids would go to college and get out and buy a second hand car and go across the country and discover America. I never did that. I went from New York to Paris and New York was my America”
~ William Klein
(1928-2022)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1308 - Manuel Álvarez Bravo
La Hija de los Danzantes [The Daughter of the Dancers], 1933“When one takes a photograph, one doesn’t think about saying anything in particular. One doesn’t think about making a statement but rather of creating something visual which can later bear a meaning that one didn’t intend to transmit-depending on the viewer’s interpretation but not necessarily on the photographer’s”
~ Manuel Álvarez Bravo
(1902-2002) -
#1307 - Cig Harvey
All the Rhododendrons, Camden, Maine, 2019“When I’m not making work, I’m spending my time reading. I’m reading and thinking about how to present something in a different way visually or through words”
~ Cig Harvey
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#1306 - Sarah Moon
John Galliano for Dior, 2022“I create situations that do not exist. I seek the truth from fiction.”
~ Sarah Moon
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#1305 - Mother's Day 2024
Audrey Hepburn on her bike with her dog "Famous" at Paramount Studios, Los Angeles, CA, 1957“In all the world, there is no heart for me like yours. In all the world, there is no love for you like mine.”
~ Maya Angelou
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#1303 - Marc Riboud
Highbury Stadium, England, 1954“Photographs must be taken without an exchange of glances between the photographer and the subject. Without giving, without returning anything. I just shoot”
~ Marc Riboud
(1923-2016)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1302 - Paul Cupido
Varanasi, India, 1956“For me personal experiences are the initial impulses to create. When presenting the work after period of contemplation, I hope these feelings and emotions become more abstract and universal. In the end it is not about us, but a deeper, universal emotion and connection”
~ Paul Cupido
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#1301 - Jeffrey Conley - View at Photo London May 16-19th
First Light, Oregon, 2020, Printed 2024"I think of being out in the landscape as a time to harvest observations - then in the darkroom is the time where the observation finds its voice, its landing space in its physical manifestation"
~ Jeffrey Conley
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#1300 - Marc Riboud
Varanasi, India, 1956“There are different ways of seeing. I have mine. For me to photograph a beautiful face, a misty landscape is somehow like listening to music or reading poetry. It helps me to live”
~ Marc Riboud
(1923-2016)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1299 - Jane Bown
Bertrand Russell“I was terrified, I didn’t think I even knew who he was. But the light was good”
~ Jane Bown
(1925-2014)“War doesn’t determine who is right - only who is left”
~ Bertrand Russell -
#1298 - Luis González Palma
La Rosa, 1989“In my artistic process I have tried to create images that invite the observer to examine by means of what I call “emotional contemplation” assigning through the beauty in them the meaning of their shape”
~ Luis González Palma
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#1297 - William Klein
Dolores Wants a Taxi, New York (Vogue), 1958, printed 2016“A good photograph becomes something more than just a good photograph. It has meaning and value that extends beyond the medium itself. Something spiritual that reveals something about life”
~ William Klein
(1928-2022)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1296 - Michael Kenna
Kussharo Lake, Study 5, Hokkaido, Japan, 2002 (Printed 2013)“Japan has a long and rich tradition of reciprocal gift giving. I have been the grateful recipient of so much over so many years in Japan, and I know that I will never be able to give back in equal measure. I hope this work can be seen as a small token of my desire to do so. I also hope this work can be viewed as a homage to Japan and that it will serve to symbolize my immense ongoing appreciation and deep gratitude for this beautiful and mysterious country”
~ Michael Kenna
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#1295 - Louis Stettner
Coming to America, 1951/Printed Later“A good photograph becomes something more than just a good photograph. It has meaning and value that extends beyond the medium itself. Something spiritual that reveals something about life”
~ Louis Stettner
(1922-2016)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1294 - Paul Cupido
Diptych Blue Gold, 2021“Our way of life is strongly dependent on the cycle and rhythm of the seasons, the movement of the tides and the phases of the moon”
~ Paul Cupido
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#1293 - Sarah Moon
Passing By, 2010"I believe that the greatest creativity stems from the childlike nature that one has retained"
~ Sarah Moon -
#1291 - Fred Lyon
Lombard Street Grapevine, Night, from Telegraph Hill, c. 1950's/printed later“In my city we like to think of ourselves as risk-taking, edge-of-the continent explorers, rakish and louche. For example, we go from sleazy to elegance and find that logical. San Francisco is a city noted for its liberal attitude where anything goes. I just love this place.”
~ Fred Lyon
(1924-2022)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1289 - Jeffrey Conley
Branch and Clouds, France, 2022, Printed 2024"Within the swirling randomness of light and form in nature, sometimes wonderful elements line up out of pure chance - synchronicity. In my view, much of photographing the landscape is about the wonder of ephemeral elements and taking notice of juxtaposed parts that are constantly in motion. It’s all about being present, aware, responsive, and of course, lucky. This photograph was made on a hike on a mostly rainy day in November within the forest of Fontainebleau, France. I was captivated by the graceful shape of the branch and the way the background clouds seemed to mingle with the light and form. The balanced circumstances aligned briefly and then the moment was gone."
~ Jeffrey Conley
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#1287 - Marc Riboud
The Peacock, Jaipur, India, 1956, printed later“Solitary wanderings, eyes always peeled. As evening approaches, I wonder what meaning could be given to those encounters. Doubt often hovers nearby, but I photograph the way a musician hums. Looking is like breathing. So when luck offers me a good picture, joy is surely not far away”
~ Marc Riboud
(1923-2016)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1286 - Steve McCurry and Jeffrey Conley
Exhibitions extended to Saturday, May 4th, 2024Due to popular demand Jeffrey Conley's exhibition, An Ode to Nature and Steve McCurry's The Endless Traveler have been extended until Saturday May 4th, 2024. Don't miss this opportunity to experience two amazing shows at our Santa Monica gallery. We look forward to your visit.
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#1284 - Pentti Sammallahti
Koylio, Finland (Jumping Cats), 1973"Everything I've photographed exists regardless of me, my role is only to be receptive. The most important thing is the luck, behind every good image there is the good luck too”~ Pentti Sammallahti
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#1283 - PFG in New York
The AIPAD Photography Show is back at the ArmoryWe are excited to return to New York next week for AIPAD 2024, at one of our favorite venues - the Park Avenue Armory.
Is there a photograph that catches your fancy on our website that you would like to see in person? We are happy to arrange special VIP appointments at the fair. To discuss further and schedule a viewing, please contact peter@peterfetterman.com
Explore our online preview for featured works by Henri Cartier Bresson, Jeffrey Conley, Sarah Moon, Anastasia Samoylova, and George Tice. -
#1282 - Brigitte Carnochan
Tea Rose IV, 1999“Earth laughs in flowers.”
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson -
#1281 - Burt Glinn
Andy Warhol with Edie Sedgwick and Chuck Wein, New York, 1965"I think that what you've got to do is discover the essential truth of the situation, and have a point of view about it."
~ Burt Glinn -
#1280 - Louis Stettner
Young Girl, Penn Station, NYC, 1953 (Printed 1981)“The League taught me that no matter how original and talented the photographers vision might berth, ultimate success of the photograph was mutually dependent on the photographer and the world of reality around him or her. Not to ignore, but on the contrary to concentrate his or her talents on everyday working people and what was immediately around them in terms of living and environment”
~ Louis Stettner
(1922-2016)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1279 - Harry Benson
Beatles Composing, Paris, 1964“I soon saw how the music came naturally. It wasn’t like they’d built in time to compose - they had to do it on the fly. There was a piano in Paul’s room. At one point John pulled up a chair and started tinkering. Paul joined in. John started humming what I would later recognize as the tune to,“Baby’s good to me you know / She’s happy as can be you know / She said so…..” But they got stuck. Where should it go after the melody?
George wandered over with his guitar and played a catchy rhythm - and -blues riff, plucking away. He seemed to be improvising, although John was later credited with writing the riff-influenced by Bobby Parker’s song “Watch Your Step” - the way I heard it that day it was George coming up with it. They appeared to be writing a song right in front of me. And as John and Paul kept at it on the piano, Ringo, in a black turtle-neck came over and stood next to George, and I had my shot: The Beatles composing “I Feel Fine”.
~ Harry Benson
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#1278 - Cig Harvey
Claire in the Forsythia, Rockport, Maine, 2010“Nature doesn’t wait for anyone”
~ Cig Harvey
ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1277 - Elliott Erwitt
North Carolina, 1950“I have a strong attraction to the American South. People there have a marvelous exterior - wonderful manners, warm friendliness until you touch on things you’re not supposed to touch on. Then you see the hardness beneath the mask of nice manners”
~ Elliott Erwitt
(1928 - 2023)ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1276 - Paul Cupido
Unmei, 2022"I believe that childhood can contain certain numinous moments, something that can give a sort of almost cosmic inspiration. I experienced this with the sea close to our family home, which has an enormous tidal effect, with the water ebbing and flowing twice a day. At low tide, you can walk out across the mudflats and witness a myriad of life, including multitudes of birds. Then at high tide, that same area is completely submerged by two meters of water. During our long childhood summers, we would lose all sense of time, sometimes spending so long at the shore that the sea had time to rise, fall, and rise again. At night, the lighthouse would flash through my childhood bedroom window every four seconds, and my grandparents used to tell me it was watching over us. These experiences meant that from a very young age, I was acutely aware of the perpetual rhythms of the island, like the cosmic phenomenon of the moon controlling the tides, the passing of the seasons. That enduring sense of rhythm has certainly influenced my work as an artist."
~ Paul Cupido
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#1275 - Mario Algaze
"Encuentro" Cuzco, Perú, 2002“The aim of every artist is to arrest motion, which is life, by artificial means and hold it fixed so that a hundred years later, when a stranger looks at it, it moves again since it is life.”
~ William FaulknerENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1274 - Cig Harvey
Rose Petals on the Stairs, Mexico, 2020“Nature doesn’t wait for anyone”
~ Cig Harvey -
#1273 - Wolfgang Suschitzky
Embankment, London, 1947“To walk alone in London is the greatest rest”
~ Virginia Woolf“I’m not aware that I have a specific style. I just take pictures as I come across them”
~ Wolfgang SuschitzkyENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
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#1272 - Henri Cartier-Bresson
Srinagar, Kashmir, 1948“At the moment of shooting (composition) can stem only from our intuition, for we are out to capture the fugitive moment, and all the interrelationships involved are on the move……. It very rarely happens that a photograph which was feebly composed can be saved by reconstruction of its composition under the darkroom’s enlarger. The integrity of the vision is no longer there”
~ Henri Cartier-Bresson
(1908 - 2004) -
#1271 | The Naples Art Institute
The Power of photography Museum exhibitionWe are thrilled to share that the “The Power of Photography” exhibition has been met with a wonderful reception! The Naples Press recently covered the exhibition in their Arts and Leisure section. Harriet Howard Heithaus's review for the paper is shared below.
Visit the exhibition online
There's still time to see the exhibition. The exhibition of 122 original prints curated by collector and gallerist Peter Fetterman, is on view now until April 28th 2024. For more information on visiting the museum, please see below for tickets and more information.
The Power of Photography Exhibition
Naples Art Institue
585 Park Street
Naples, FL 34102
Naples Art Institue and Gallery Store
Monday/Wednesday/Friday/Saturday: 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Tuesday/Thursday: 10 a.m. - 8 p.m.
Sunday: 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. -
#1270 - Steve McCurry
Floating Offerings, Varanasi, India, 1996"There’s a contemplative or meditative quality to photography, which I find to be a sort of peaceful state. When I’m walking around photographing, I get into a particular mindset where I become much more attuned to the world around me."
~ Steve McCurry
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#1269 - Jeffrey Conley
Forest Path, France, 2018, Printed 2024“I feel that being a photographer is simply the logical endpoint for being someone who has a certain type of ability to observe. As a child, I noticed all sorts of things - some might say I was easily distracted, but really it was my early and formative time of refining my vision. I can’t stress enough how important observation is as the foundational component of being a photographer. It is all about noticing things; light, texture, form, the confluence of these elements within infinite combinations.”
~ Jeffrey Conley
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#1268 - Michael Kenna
Circle in Trees, Marly, 1995“The great French photographer, Eugene Atget, spent many years photographing the gardens in and around Paris designed by the landscape architect André Le Nôtre in the 17th century. Early in my career, I followed in the footsteps of Atget to see where and how he photographed. I explored the formal estates of Versailles, Saint Cloud, Sceaux, Vaux-le-Vicomte and the Tuileries, amongst others, before finding Marly-le-Roi. Pools of water, fountains, rows of topiaried hedges and perspective illusions were the hallmark of Le Nôtre. This photograph, albeit maybe designed long after Le Nôtre, typifies an aspect of his landscapes - the unexpected. Through a forest of trees a circle appears, for no apparent reason. I’ve long felt that questions were far more interesting than answers. and this circle continues to intrigue me. Someday, I may find out what it is or what it is used for. Or maybe I won’t.”
~ Michael Kenna
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#1267 - Arnold Newman
Senator John F. Kennedy at the Capitol, Washington DC, 1953, printed later“My dad used to have an expression. It’s the lucky person who gets up in the morning, puts both feet on the floor, knows what they are about to do and thinks it still matters”
~ President Joe Biden“We must never forget that art is not a form of propaganda. It is a form of truth”
~ John F Kennedy -
#1266 - Paul Caponigro
Running White Deer, Ireland, 1967, printed 2019“In my many years of photographing the landscape and prehistoric stones of Ireland, I had come to realize that the life of the place generated a quiet magic. During my photography, there was usually a herd of white deer. They were randomly roving on the grounds on an estate and so I asked permission of the owner and set myself to the task of how to photograph them. Catching them in small groups was unsatisfying but I remembered the talent of the Irish sheepdog and enlisted the help of the owner and his dog to corral a substantial number of these white beasts. I visualized the deer as being spread out before the trees of the estate and set about the choreography of the event. Some 25 or so of these deer were collected at one end of a long field and at my signal the dog was to chase them in my direction. My camera was set up so as to include on my ground glass the grass field as foreground and the trees and background with myself hidden in the tress so as not to be seen.Not knowing what to expect I signaled and to my delight and surprise one of the deer took the lead and the others followed one behind the other. In the subdued light of the day my calculated exposure required the widest lens, aperture and a slow shutter speed of I second. I did not know and could not know what impression would appear on my film but to my delight on processing the film I found a beautifully impressionist feel made by the running white deer. As to capturing something magical, I knew that to be the case when two white swans flew directly over my head and camera moments after releasing the shutter of the lens.”
~ Paul Caponigro
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#1265 - Edouard Boubat
Lella, Bretagne, 1947"I have often been asked what I think of that photo. What I think, to quote Proust, is that it is charged with something of the “transparent substance of our best moments,” those that we shared while we were young. Boubat and I, before the course of life made us drift apart, caught upon the spell that we were living under back then and what can only be called a poetic adventure.”
~ Lella, 1987
(Great muse of artist Edouard Boubat)'Never give all the heart for love'
Never give all the heart for love
Will hardly seem worth thinking of
To passionate women if it seem
Certain, and they never dream
That it fades out from kiss to kiss:
For everything that’s lovely is
But a brief, dreamy, kind delight.
O never give the heart outright.
For they, for all smooth lips can say
Have given their heart up to the play.
And who could play it well enough
If deaf and dumb and blind with love?
He that made this knows all the cost
For he gave all his heart and lost
~ W B Yates
(1865-1839) -
#1264 - Henri Cartier-Bresson
Rue Mouffetard, 1954“It is through living that we discover ourselves, at the same time as we discover the world around us”
~ Henri Cartier-Bresson
(1908 - 2004) -
#1263 - Michael Kenna
Red Crown Crane Feeding, Tsuru, Hokkaido, Japan, 2005“Japan has a long and rich tradition of reciprocal gift giving. I have been the grateful recipient of so much over so many years in Japan, and I know that I will never be able to give back in equal measure. I hope this work can be seen as a small token of my desire to do so. I also hope this work can be viewed as a homage to Japan and that it will serve to symbolize my immense ongoing appreciation and deep gratitude for this beautiful and mysterious country”
~ Michael Kenna -
#1262 - Cig Harvey
Emily in the River, 2019“I have often felt that beauty is the only language worth speaking”
~ Cig Harvey -
#1261 - Eve Arnold
Baby's Arm, 1959“I have been poor and I wanted to document poverty. I had lost a child and I was obsessed with birth. I was interested in politics and I wanted to know how it affected our lives. I am a woman and I wanted to know about women”
~ Eve Arnold
(1912-2012) -
#1260 - Flor Garduño
La Mujer Que Sueña, Pinotepa Nacional, México, 1991“The models are friends of mine. These photographs involve moments of complicity that only a friend could accept. If there is no fondness between the model and the photographer, this kind of work cannot be done”
~ Flor Garduno
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#1259 - PFG in New York
The photography show at the Park Avenue ArmoryThe Photography Show is approaching quickly! Join PFG in New York City this spring for AIPAD 2024 at one of our favorite venues, the Park Avenue Armory. The fair will take place between April 25th - 28th, 2024. Tickets are available to purchase now! More information included below.
Is there a photograph that catches your fancy on our website and you would like to see the print in person? We are happy to bring photographs with us for special VIP viewings at the fair.
To schedule a viewing please contact peter@peterfetterman.com with viewing requests. -
#1258 - Paul Caponigro
Redding Woods, 1968/Printed 1969“Photography is a medium, a language, through which I might come to experience directly, live more closely with, the interaction between myself and nature.”
– Paul Caponigro
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#1257 - Cig Harvey
White Phlox (Madeleine) Eagle Island, Maine, 2021“There is an orchestra outside my window”
~ Cig Harvey
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#1256 | Bernard Plossu
Saint Pierreville, Ardeche, 2012"Nothing important is happening but that is precisely because a great photo doesn't necessarily have to show something important, it can be ordinary, anodyne."
~ Bernard Plossu
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#1255 - George Tice
Joe's Barber Shop, Patterson, New Jersey, 1970“Photography teaches us to see, and we can see whatever we wish. When I take a photograph, I make a wish. I was always looking for beauty.”
~ George Tice
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#1254 - Brett Weston
Botanical Leaves, 1975"People are under the illusion that it's easy...Technically, it is complex. You have a million options with equipment to distract you. I tell my students to simplify their equipment."
~ Brett Weston
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#1253 - Pentti Sammallahti
Humlebaek, Denmark, 1999"Why must art be static? You look at an abstraction, sculptured or painted, an entirely exciting arrangement of planes, spheres, nuclei, entirely without meaning. It would be perfect, but it is always still. The next step in sculpture is motion."
~ Alexander Calder
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#1252 - Henri Cartier-Bresson
Simiane-la-Rotonde, 1970“For me the camera is a sketch book, an instrument of intuition and spontaneity, the master of the instant which in visual terms, questions and decides simultaneously. In order to give a meaning to the world, one has to feel involved in what one frames through the viewfinder. This attitude requires concentration, discipline of mind, sensitivity and a sense of geometry. It is by economy of means that one arrives at simplicity of expression"
~ Henri Cartier-Bresson
(1908 - 2004) -
#1251 - Jeffrey Conley
Fiordland Waterfall, NZ, 2011, Printed 2024“I feel that being a photographer is simply the logical endpoint for being someone who has a certain type of ability to observe. As a child, I noticed all sorts of things - some might say I was easily distracted, but really it was my early and formative time of refining my vision. I can’t stress enough how important observation is as the foundational component of being a photographer. It is all about noticing things; light, texture, form, the confluence of these elements within infinite combinations.”
~ Jeffrey Conley
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#1250 - Elliott Erwitt
New York City [Three men in tutu], 1956“You can find pictures anywhere. It’s simply a matter of noticing things and organizing them. You just have to care about what’s around you and have a concern with humanity and the human comedy”
~ Eliott Erwitt
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#1249 | Steve McCurry
Fisherman at Weligama, Sri Lanka, 1995 (Printed 2020)'In viewing the images in Devotion and at Peter Fetterman Gallery, I can only conclude that if, as the saying goes, “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.,” then I’d revise that to say “Beauty is in the eye of Steve McCurry.'
~ Tom Teicholz
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#1248 - Sabine Weiss
Mode pour Vogue, Paris, 1955“Photography is an alibi, a pretext to see everything, to go everywhere, to communicate with everyone”
~ Sabine Weiss
(1924-2021) -
#1247 | John Edward Sache
Kashmir: Bridge built by Akbar on the Dal Lake, 1870'sJohn Edward Saché arrived in Calcutta from the United States of America in the latter part of 1864. As the capital of British India, Calcutta provided an optimal environment for photographers to establish their businesses. Saché would spend his summers operating from his studio nestled in the hills, where many sought refuge from the oppressive heat, and return to the plains during the pleasant winter months.Over the course of nearly two decades spent in India, John Edward Saché produced over 500 images and ran a successful enterprise, elevating him to the ranks of the foremost photographers of his time. His extensive travels throughout northern India encompassed major landmarks and towns, resulting in a rich collection of images that showcased his mastery of picturesque compositions. -
#1246 - Lillian Bassman
It's A Cinch: Carmen, New York, Harper's Bazaar, 1951“You see, when models work with men, they strike up a pose and so on…..with me they were always totally relaxed. I was just a woman photographing another woman who was very relaxed as well”
~ Lillian Bassman
(1917 - 2012) -
#1245 - Sebastião Salgado
Nenets nomads camp, Siberia, Russia, 2011“It is important that you respect what you are photographing."
~ Sebastião Salgado
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#1244 - Elliott Erwitt
Bratsk, Siberia, 1967“In general I don’t think too much. I certainly don’t use those funny words museum people and art critics like”
~ Elliott Erwitt
(1928 - 2023) -
#1243 - Wolfgang Suschitzky
Charing Cross Road [puddle jumper], 1937“I have done a great deal of work to make all these photos and all these prints. I feel I have nothing to be ashamed of”
~ Wolfgang Suschitzky
(1912-2016) -
#1242 - Jeffrey Conley
Autumn, Forest of Fontainebleau, France, 2021, Printed 2024“Photography is for me a kind of meditation which widens my perception of the existing and evolving world around us. I seek refuge and simplicity in my photographs; and I find in it a personal accomplishment that I sincerely hope others too can feel.”
~ Jeffrey Conley