Nisqually Glacier – Ranier Park

Nisqually Glacier – Ranier Park

This hand-colored landscape view shows Nisqually Glacier in the U.S. state of Washington. A mountaineer, who may be carrying a tripod-mounted plate camera, can be seen along left margin, just below the snow line.  A vintage print, it was removed from an album of the photographer’s known work and laid down on acid-free mount board and embellished with a graphite frame. Along the bottom margin can be seen a hand-drawn stock # and title, indicating this photograph may have been intended as a working maquette or prototype for a commercial postcard.

The Nisqually Glacier is one of the larger glaciers on the southwestern face of Mount Rainier in the U.S. state of Washington. The glacier is one of the most easily viewed on the mountain, and is accessible from the Paradise visitor facilities in Mount Rainier National Park. Nisqually Glacier is the source of the Nisqually River. -Wikipedia, accessed July, 2025

Mervyn David Silberstein: 1885-1957

A deep dive: Mervyn David Silberstein…Through One Man’s Lens, was published in the Winter, 2018 issue of the Russian River Recorder, an official publication of the Healdsburg Museum & Historical Society. The pdf also includes the 2007 Recorder article: Cherished Moments: Young Mervyn Silberstein in Healdsburg. An excerpt, by authors Holly Hoods and Pamela Vana-Paxhi:

Healdsburg’s celebrated early 20th century photographer Mervyn David Silberstein was born in 1885 in San Francisco and grew up in Healdsburg with his parents, Jacob and Hannah, and younger sister, Ethel (“Daisy”). They were respected Jewish leaders in the business community. His father owned a successful dry goods and men’s clothing store. The Grangers Store, at the southeast corner of (what is now) Healdsburg Avenue and North Street. The family lived upstairs. While attending Healdsburg High School, Silberstein discovered what would become a lifelong passion in photography. He purchased his first camera at his father’s store. He playfully embellished many of his photos with cartoons and captions. By the time Silberstein graduated from high school in 1903, the self-described “Camera Fiend” was already a cartoonist and writer for the Sotoyome Sun and later, the Healdsburg Enterprise

Another biography of the artist was included as part of an 1993 exhibit held at the Chinese Cultural Center in San Francisco:

“Born in San Francisco in 1885, Mervyn D. Silberstein spent his early years in Healdsburg, California. He returned to San Francisco in 1910 and worked as a graphic designer and a free lance photographer. As a member of the California Camera Club, Silberstein’s photographs were exhibited in cities across the country and many of them appeared on the covers of national magazines.

He had a profound interest in Chinese culture as evidenced by the large number of photographs he took of San Francisco’s Chinatown. These photographs provide insight into a community that had just begun the process of westernization and integration, while maintaining many Chinese customs. Scenes of merchants, the elderly, and  children captivated Silberstein. He was especially fond of children, and he managed to capture, as the photographs in this exhibit show, the spirit and the innocence of the children on Chinatown’s streets.”

Title
Nisqually Glacier – Ranier Park
Photographer
Country
Medium
Year
Dimensions

Image Dimensions8.6 x 5.9 cm laid down

Support Dimensions19.9 x 16.5 cm non-native, acid-free matt board supplied by seller

Print Notes

Recto: Stock # and title, presumably in the artists hand along lower margin: 4075- NISQUALLY GLACIER – RAINIER PARK; hand-colored: believed to be contact-print from original negative.

Exhibitions | Collections

Healdsburg Museum & Historical Society, Healdsburg, CA: the Silberstein photographic collection consists of approximately 623 photographs and postcards, including some duplicates, that were taken in Healdsburg from 1903 to 1913.

Provenance

Purchased for this archive in July, 2016 from dealer in San Francisco, California. On the question of provenance, the dealer stated: I’ve had these quite awhile and am absolutely sure they were by Silberstein. Some of them had information on the back but since I mounted them that information is not viewable. Also, they came from an album originally and were identified as by Silberstein.”