Details
IRVING PENN (1917–2009)
Ginkgo Leaves, New York, 1990
dye transfer print
signed, titled, dated, numbered '16959' and annotated in pencil with stamped photographer's copyright credit, reproduction limitation and edition information in ink (verso)
image/sheet: 2234 x 1912 in. (57.8 x 49.5 cm.)
This work is from an edition of twenty-two.
Provenance
Bruce Silverstein Gallery, New York;
acquired from the above by the present owner, 2018.
Literature
Irving Penn, Passage: A Work Record, Alfred A. Knopf/Callaway, 1991, cover.
Irving Penn, Still Life, Little, Brown and Co., 2001, n.p.
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Lot Essay

Throughout his remarkable nearly seventy year career, Irving Penn consistently demonstrated a mastery of what makes a compelling image, shaping much of the visual language of the 20th century. According to Anna Wintour, whom he worked with for over twenty years at Vogue, Penn effectively ‘changed the way people saw the world and our perception of what is beautiful.’ Penn’s sophisticated and refined approach to fashion photography, one that emphasized style over context, was not dissimilar to that of his distinguished still-lifes. Working with controlled light against plain backgrounds, Penn arranged everything from celebrities and iconic personalities to humble objects like cigarette butts into elegant, balanced compositions. Ginkgo Leaves stands apart from both the glamour of his couture images and the delicateness of his renowned “Flowers” series yet is informed by the same meticulous eye. The image portrays two leaves from the Ginkgo tree found on Penn’s Long Island home. He and his wife Lisa Fonssagrives planted the tree in 1950 to commemorate their wedding day, creating a symbol of their growing love that is still standing today. Naturally, the colors of the Ginkgo tree leaves change with the seasons, transitioning from a robust olive green to a saturated golden yellow. Penn’s choice to include one leaf of each color at different points in their life cycles reflects the inevitable progression of time, which Penn recurrently explored in his work. Whether it was rotting fruit or the obsoletion of specialized trades, Penn saw beauty in the imminence of decay and chose to accentuate such a fate rather than concealing it. With his color work, Penn gravitated toward the complex dye-transfer process. This labor-intensive technique involves transferring layers of CMYK dyes onto paper with matrices, allowing for precise control of the color and intense vibrancy. In Penn’s hands, this meticulous process became an extension of his artistic discipline, yielding richly saturated tones with every detail and imperfection rendered in sculptural clarity. With its serene symmetry and touching personal significance, Ginkgo Leaves is one of the most distinguished and celebrated images in Penn’s diverse oeuvre. It also appears as the cover image of his iconic monograph Passage (1991), in which Penn details his own thoughts on his long, illustrious career.

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