Pool in the Road

Pool in the Road

A pictorial landscape view showing a path and standing water which has encroached a roadway. Bennett, 1861-1936, was active in the early 20th Century as an amateur and also did “at home portraiture” as a commercial photographer from her home in Baltimore, Maryland.

Like most of the Salon Club workers Jeanne E. Bennett is a newcomer. Her special realm is Brittany, and she apparently never tires of depicting little hooded girls at the ferry, fetching water at the brook, roaming through the fields, or busy with some domestic occupation in old-fashioned interiors. Her work is at times wonderfully vital, and always subtle and delicate. Each of her pictures has a meaning, and is handled with beautiful skill and rare artistic feeling. (1.)

  1. Sadakichi Hartmann, The Salon Club and the First American Photographic Salon at New York” , The American Amateur Photographer, No. 16 (July 1904), pp. 298
Title
Pool in the Road
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Journal
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Dimensions

Image Dimensions21.1 x 16.6 cm tipped to mount | Lieferung 4 | Fourth Issue

Support Dimensions34.1 x 26.4 cm gray colored paper

Print Notes

Recto: Engraved: l.l.: JEANNE E. BENNET, BALTIMORE POOL IN THE ROAD; within plate at l.r.: MR Co (atelier); on mount at l.r.: KP, for abbreviated name of journal.

Published

The Photo-miniature, Volume 6, May, 1904, full-page halftone, A Pool in the Road, Jeanne E. Bennett, between pp. 80-1.

Art in Photography, Photo Era Publishing Company, Boston: 1905: autotype: The Pool in the Road, Jeanne Bennett, Baltimore.