Wonder
Tony King passed away on May 13, 2017 of mesothelioma. Born in Canada, he spent most of his 83 years in Massachusetts. He was married to the artist Judith Stoddard King for 59 years, They had four children.
Beginning at age eleven with a
Brownie camera given him by his mother, King quickly developed an interest in
photographing and writing about the world around him. " My life has been
dominated by one thing: a need to show people what I'm excited about. When I
was a little boy, I was always dragging people off to show them the things that
made the world wonderful to me."
Church Window
Tony owned a small manufacturing
company in Worcester, MA for many years, a family business which
gave him the freedom to pursue only those professional photographic endeavors
which interested him. Those interests led especially toward photographing and
writing books, at which he was prolific.
Among his many books are A Place to Begin: The New England Experience,
with text by Hal Borland; The Faces of
the Great Lakes, with text by Jonathan Ela (both of these books were
published by the Sierra Club); Ojibway
Summer, My Maine Thing, This Proud Place: An Affectionate Look at
New England, Criss-Cross Applesauce, Keep
In Touch (an album of some of his best black & white postcards) A Year to Remember (favorite photos from
the black & white New England calendars he published for many years), Versed in Country Things, with poems by
Robert Frost, Snow Season, from Snow to
Snow, and The Oak Behind the House.
The Rig
For the last decade of his life he published compilations of his photographs on various subjects in small,
soft-cover booklets called Going Home Books and Look Around Books. His final
book, Closer to Home, for which he
compiled the photographs and wrote the text shortly before his death, was
published posthumously in December, 2017.
Although most of his books are out
of print, copies of many of them can still be ordered from Time and Quiet
Press. The web site is timeandquietpress.com/
My copy of This
Proud Place
My Maine Thing remains my favorite of his books, followed by This Proud Place, a book about New England.
Tony has photographed in many places other than New
England, but has mined most of his photographic riches from his
own back yard.. He says, "Most were made just going about the natural
business of living. Taking the carpool. Visiting my kids at summer camp. Taking
my daughter to college. Moving my dad back and forth to his cottage on Lake Huron. Everywhere I go I leave a little extra time.
I always have a camera with me. These things come out of my life."
Three White Hats
In the mid '90s, his concern about
ecological issues gradually
led him away from the black & white glimpses of life
that I have found so satisfying and soul-enriching to concentrate on color
photography of nature, culminating in the publication of the beautifully
produced, limited edition book Of Time
and Quiet.
While most of Elliott Erwitt's
photographs contain people (Or dogs. Or people and dogs.), many of King's do
not. However, they are alive with human presence. Even when no people are
visible, their presence is felt -- as though they might have just stepped out
of the scene, or were about to step into it.
Hay Rake
Although he used digital cameras
in his later years, Tony worked with Leicas for most of his career; also
sometimes using a medium format camera which gave a square negative. I never
asked him what it was. His technique is straightforward, as are his photographs.
Most of his work, and certainly his best work, in my opinion, has been in black
and white. Deceptively simple, spare, economical, yet always celebrating beauty
and always with an undercurrent of mystery just beneath the surface.
To be continued. . .
(All photographs except for the
photo of my copy of This Proud Place copyright Judy and Tony King Foundation, 2020.)
Check out my prints for sale at my online gallery: https://davejenkins.pixels.com/ Looking is free, and, who knows? You might find something you like.
The second edition of my book, Backroads and Byways of Georgia will be released in June, 2023.
Text copyright 2023 David B.Jenkins.
I post Monday, Wednesday, and Friday unless life gets in the way.
Soli Gloria Deo -- For the glory of God alone.
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