Artist's
Biography
Brett Weston may be said to be the first successful artistic
heir in the history of photography. The son of Edward
Weston, Brett was taught the basics of photography by
his father at the young age of fourteen, and set out on
his own from that point on. At sixteen he had his first
one-man show, and received international recognition at
eighteen when a score of his photographs were displayed
in the legendary “Film und Foto” exhibition of 1929 in
Stuttgart. By the age of twenty, his photographs were
on view in major shows in the US, Europe, and Japan. Since
then, Weston’s photographs have been featured in hundreds
of exhibitions around the world, and are staples in the
collections of leading museums and galleries including
the Getty Museum, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art,
Art Institute of Chicago, George Eastman House, Metropolitan
Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art New York, Whitney
Museum of American Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Oklahoma
City Museum of Art, Amon Carter Museum, Museum of Fine
Arts Houston, National Gallery of Art and the Smithsonian
American Art Museum among others. Concerned with the elemental
mass of forms, he is known for his great abstractions;
he is also generally acknowledged as one of the finest
printers in the medium.
"Photography
is 90% sheer, brutal drudgery! The other 10% is inspiration!!"
~ Brett Weston
"The
camera for an artist is just another tool. It is no more
mechanical than a violin if you analyze it. Beyond the
rudiments, it is up to the artist to create art, not the
camera."
~ Brett Weston