Page 1 - The Legacy of Abraham Rothstein - part 2
P. 1

PLATES


           Given  the  production  parameters  of  this  book,  the  number  of
        plates had to be limited. In the case of old family photographs, the
        limitation  is  not  merely  financial:  very  few  images  remain  of  the
        generations  preceding  AR.  The  studio  photograph  of  his  parents
        (Plate 1) is the only remaining picture of his mother; it is also one of
        only two of his father. Both of those photographs were sent to AR
        from Poland (he brought few, if any, personal items with him on his
        flight to America), so they may be dated post-1903. In later years a
        large framed tinted blow-up of his parents’ picture hung in the hall at
        his  house  on  Figueroa  Street,  an  object  of  his  respect  and  his
        grandchildren’s  curiosity.  No  photographs  of  AR  himself  seem  to
        predate 1908, the year of his marriage. The “dress-up” pictures (Plate
        5)  probably  were  taken  while  AR  and  Ben  owned  a  secondhand
        clothing  store--an  excellent  source  of  costumes.  It  has  been
        speculated that AR sporadically sought work as a movie extra, and
        may  have  used  those  photos  as  “publicity  stills”;  but  many  of  the
        snapshots  are  either  crudely  printed  or  printed  as  postcards,
        undercutting that theory. The late photographs (Plate 6) were taken
        by his grandson Jordan (see his reminiscences).
           The sculpture presented a different problem. Many color slides of
        AR’s work have been taken over the years—including a series taken
        by  a  museum  photographer—but  the  cost  of  making  a  black-and-
        white  negative  from  a  positive  transparency  is  prohibitive.
        Accordingly,  another  photographer  (Jan  Steward)  was  hired  to
        produce  the  monochrome  images  used  here;  to  simplify  logistics,
        pieces held by Carmel Winkler and Jonathan Gluckman were the only
        ones  included  in  that  photo  session—no  statement  of  the  relative
        quality or interest of other pieces is implied by their absence. Where
        possible,  the  sculptures  are  grouped  thematically  on  a  plate,  but
        efficient use of space had to be the main concern. Many of the details
        of  AR’s  works  are  lightly  incised,  and  do  not  show  up  well  on
        photographs;  retouching  in  some  cases  was  judged  necessary  to
        enhance  those  lines.  No  halftone  reproductions,  of  course,  can  do
        justice to the works, which must be seen up close and in the round in
        order to be fully appreciated.
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