Michael Kenna - Huangshan: Poems from the T'ang Dynasty

Huangshan: Poems from the T’ang Dynasty
Photographs by Michael Kenna
Introduction by John Wood
Translated by Stanton Hager
Edition: 60 numbered and 15 lettered copies
Twelve bound, signed platinum prints
One free-standing, signed platinum print
16 x 14 1/4 inches
Handcrafted in New England
 

"Michael Kenna's landscapes have always had the subtle magic of Chinese painting and poetry....It was immediately evident to me that Kenna could not be creating such work were he not sharing an aesthetic and spiritual affinity with the sources of Chinese art. One does not simply take a camera to China, point, click, and return with such pictures. I could not guess how many photographs of China and its mountains I've seen, but I had never before seen any that looked like Michael Kenna's-even those by contemporary Chinese photographers. The source of Kenna's imagery clearly came from within him but mirrored an earlier Chinese way of seeing..."

- from the Introduction by John Wood

 
 

 

Michael Kenna - Mont-Saint-Michel

Mont-Saint-Michel
Text by Henry Adams
Photographs by Michael Kenna
Introduction by John Wood
Edition: 60 numbered and 15 lettered copies
14 bound, plus 1 fully signed and free-standing, platinum prints
16 x 14 1/4 inches
Handcrafted in New England

 

Again and again Michael Kenna has taken us to places we know: Stonehenge, Versailles, Japan, power plants, piers, beaches, kindergarten classrooms, and so forth. But when we arrive there with him, we feel we did not know those places at all. We realize that we are in the midst of a revelation—that he is showing us something more essential than we had previously recognized was there. That, of course, is the job of the artist, but few do it. And few are capable of doing it because original in-sight is uncommon. Those who have it possess a special genius. In photography we expect it and see it more often in portraiture than in landscapes... The great portraitists know how to emphasize or exaggerate what a face holds so that in the presence, for example, of an August Sander or Richard Avedon portrait we read far more than lust, sympathy, or revulsion into the countenance. We think we read a soul, whether we actually do or not.

But how does one catch the soul of a place? What is it that Michael Kenna does to a place, a place we may know well, that makes us seem to see it for the first time? As a photographic critic, it is my responsibility to try to explain such things, but in this instance I cannot. Kenna has mystified me for years...

- from the introduction by John Wood

(www.michaelkenna.net)