Signs and Wonders The Photographs of John Beasley Greene

in Culture, Entertainment, Events

Event Details

August 31 - January 5, 2020

Signs and Wonders The Photographs of John Beasley Greene

SFMOMA

When the young archaeologist-photographer John Beasley Greene (1832–1856) set out for Egypt in 1853, the fields of both archaeology and photography were still in formation.  Greene was one of the first to use photography in the pursuit of archaeology, meticulously recording the carved hieroglyphics covering the ancient Egyptian monuments.

In the course of his efforts, the photographer made a number of visual choices that appear strikingly modern to us today: in both the spareness of his landscapes and the tightly cropped details and high-contrast textures of his documentation of archaeological sites in Egypt (and subsequently Algeria). Greene died at 24, leaving behind few written records that might help explain his own attitudes and intentions. Instead, he left hundreds of pictures that demonstrate a young photographer’s prescient grasp of the possibilities of the new medium and invite us to consider the complex relationship between photography, colonialism, and modernism.