Property of LAGUNA ART MUSEUM, formerly in THE ESTATE OF PAUL OUTERBRIDGE, JR., Sold to Benefit the Museum's Acquisitions Fund
PAUL OUTERBRIDGE, JR.

Details
PAUL OUTERBRIDGE, JR.

Saltine Box

Platinum print. 1922. Signed and dated in pencil on the mount. 3 5/8 x 4½in. Framed.
Provenance
The Estate of Paul Outerbridge, Jr.
Literature
Szarkowski, Looking at Photographs, pp. 80-81; Dines, A Singular Aesthetic, p. 47, pl. 7; Howe, LACPS, pl. 18; Howe and Hawkins, Paul Outerbridge Jr., pp. 11, 36.
Exhibited
Paul Outerbridge: A Singular Aesthetic, Photographs & Drawings, 1921 - 1941, Laguna Beach Museum of Art, November 21, 1981 - January 10, 1982 and 12 other venues.
Further details
Lots 275-310 may be exempt from sales tax, as set forth in the sales tax notice at the front of this catalogue.

Lot Essay

There are three versions of Outerbridge's Saltine Box. The first was printed from an unretouched negative which shows a scratched or creased surface of the underside of the cracker tin. The second, offered here, shows the deftness with which Outerbridge reclaims the brillance of the metal bottom, eliminating the distracting element. The third is similar but adds another prop on the right edge of the frame.

Outerbridge's affection for both Cubist and Constructivist principles was the central axis from which many of his successful pictures were spun. John Szarkowski commented on Saltine Box's dynamic form: The photograph (reproduced here) is a puzzle - literally and surely intentionally. A three-dimensional form (apparently but not assuredly a bricklike form, with parallel edges) rests on or floats in a plane or space that cannot be rationalized. The puzzle is made more challenging by virtue of the very real and specific quality of light that falls on the subject. In sum, the picture is a challenge to our naïve trust in the evidence of our senses. (Looking At Photographs, p. 80).

Prints from the retouched negative number approximately six.