“Unloading Lumber” 1941 – A. Aubrey Bodine

Photograph by A. Aubrey Bodine • © Copyright Jennifer B. Bodine • Courtesy of www.aaubreybodine.com

Unloading Lumber (1941) – Here is a view of the waterfront – not the waterfront of Locust Point, Port Covington, or Canton, where big steel ships come in to discharge and take cargo for foreign ports. Here is a spot where smaller Chesapeake Bay craft, barges and schooners come in from coastal ports with cargoes of lumber to be used in manufacturing all the things pine boards can be used for. This is in the Fells Point area.

This image may be ordered by typing in the 5 digit image ID# 46-640 in the box below Bodine’s portrait on the Home Page.

A. Aubrey Bodine (1906-1970)
In photographic circles around the world, A. Aubrey Bodine was regarded as one of the finest pictorialists of the twentieth century. His pictures were exhibited in hundreds of prestigious shows, in scores of museums, and he won awards against top competition.

Aubrey Bodine‘s photographic career began in 1923 covering stories with his camera for the Baltimore Sunday Sun. He travelled throughout Maryland and created remarkable documentary pictures of a multitude of occupations and activities. Moreover, these documentary pictures are of the very finest quality, often artistic in design and lighting effects far beyond the usual standard of newspaper work.

Bodine submitted photographs to national and international salon competitions and consistently won top honors. Bodine believed that photography could be a creative discipline, and he studied the principles of art at the Maryland Institute College of Art. The camera and the dark room equipment were tools to him like the painter’s brush or the sculptor’s chisel.

Not the least of Bodine’s artistic ability was his craftsmanship. He was always experimenting with his tools. Some of his best pictures were literally composed in the viewfinder of the camera. In other cases he worked on the negative with dyes and intensifiers, pencil marking, and even scraping to produce the effect he had in mind. He added clouds photographically, and made other even more elaborate manipulations. Bodine’s rationale for all these technical alterations of the natural scene was simply that, like the painter, he worked from the model and selected those features which suited his sense of mood, proportion and design. The picture was the thing, not the manner of arriving at it. He did not take a picture, he made a picture.

For more information about this remarkable man, the full text of the biography of A. Aubrey Bodine, A Legend In His Time, written shortly after his death by Harold A. Williams, Bodine’s editor and closest friend, can be found on the website at www.aaubreybodine.com.

More than 6,000 photographs spanning Bodine’s 47-year career are available for viewing on the website
www.aaubreybodine.com. These images can be ordered as reprints and note cards at  www.aaubreybodine.com.

For additional information please write to: info@AAubreyBodine.com or call 1-800-556-7226.