March Crust

March Crust

A delicate, high-key, late Winter landscape by William Boyd Post, most likely photographed near his Fryeburg, Maine home.

William Boyd Post: 1857-1921 

In 1898, American amateur photographer William Boyd Post (1857-1921) moved permanently into his family’s summer vacation home in Fryeburg, Maine. He had just sold his seat on the New York Stock Exchange a year after his father had died. An active exhibitor since the late 1880’s with the New York Camera Club, his wealth and new life as a country gentleman gave him the opportunity to devote more of his time to the hobby he loved.

Photography scholar Christian Peterson, in his 2005 volume The Quiet Landscapes of William B. Post, states the artist first began taking winter photographs in 1895.  He would eventually devote a great deal of his time to the season, with his notable masterpiece Intervale, Winter, taken in 1899, a direct nod to several of Peter Henry Emerson’s naturalistic winter studies which appeared in his 1895 volume Marsh Leaves. Later in the new century, Post continued taking winter landscapes, writing about it for the journal The Photo-Era in 1910.

Title
March Crust
Photographer
Journal
Country
Medium
Atelier
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Dimensions

Image Dimensions14.4 x 17.2 cm tipped to mount | Lieferung 4 | Fourth Issue

Support Dimensions34.0 x 26.3 cm gray colored paper

Print Notes

Recto: Engraved: l.l.: W. P. POST, FRYEBURG, MAINE MARCH CRUST; within plate at l.r.: MR Co (atelier); signed by the artist in the plate at l.r.: W.B. Post; on mount at l.r.: KP, for abbreviated name of journal.

Published

Photographische Rundschau und photographisches Centralblatt, Volume 19, 1905, no title, W.P. Post, Fryeburg, Maine, full-page halftone between pp. 104-5