White source: George Grantham Bain Collection, Library of Congress, 1908. https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2014680170/. Image restored in Photoshop.
snow
One hundred twelve years in the snow


If Malevich had lived in Hawaii, he wouldn’t have painted “White on White”
Through weather, our beautiful betters return from the past to vote in the election of 2016
The advertisement for the 1910 Pierce-Arrow is photoshopped from the original at http://www.oldcaradvertising.com/index.html.
Incomplete seal
Behind the glass we’re looking through is a winter day so dark that we can barely see into the wheelhouse of the tug W. A. Rooth. The steersman is apparent with effort, however. We can make him out as he navigates his craft through its dusk or dawn, sucking a cigar as he concentrates on the passage. Through billowing smoke and steam, he is bringing the ship J. T. Hutchinson up through a lock toward the glass.
According to a record in the Library of Congress, the man in the windowed cabin passed under the light of this day in about 1903. Some time after that instant entered the record, the record’s glass backing was cracked from top to bottom. The dark and the smoke still remain on their side of the glass, however. On either side of the crack are reassuring traces of repair, and we who see past the mend see from a vantage securely reserved, short term, for sight and life. But of course what we see is coming toward us through a glass fully permeable to dark.

Source: “[Steamer] J. T. Hutchinson leaving Sault St[e.] Marie.” Detroit Publishing Company Collection, Library of Congress, http://www.loc.gov/item/det1994020791/PP/. Photoshopped.
Estampe XVIII
Source: George Grantham Bain Collection, Library of Congress, http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/ggb2004004461/. Photoshopped.
Estampe X
Steamer Sir William Siemens, Sault Ste. Marie, between 1900 and 1910. Detroit Publishing Company Collection, Library of Congress, http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/det1994015095/PP/. Photoshopped.


