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Harry Callahan

(Detroit, Michigan, 1912 - 1999, Atlanta, Georgia)

Eleanor

c. 1947 (printed 1970s)

Gelatin silver print

4 1/2 x 3 3/8 in. (11.4 x 8.6 cm)

Collection of the Akron Art Museum

Purchased with funds from Eleanor W. Aggarwal

1991.53

More Information

Harry Callahan is credited as “one of the most original photographers of the 20th century.” Eschewing dramatic subject matter in favor of more banal subjects and scenes, Callahan succeeded in teasing out and uncovering the beauty in the everyday with his lucid, unsentimental vision. Much of Callahan’s photography captured scenes from his personal life and experience. Three themes dominate his art: his wife, Eleanor; urban life and architecture; and the natural landscape. For Callahan, Eleanor represents what the artist considered as woman in all her guises—as beloved, as mother and as symbol of nature. While his images of her body are often sensual and adoring, they rarely idealize, conforming to Callahan’s belief in the camera’s role as a recorder of fact.

Keywords
Photography
Female
Black and White
Nude
American
Gelatin Silver
Frontal
Portrait
Figure