We drove up to Santa Fe to see an exhibition of the works of Ansel Adams and Paul Caponigro at the Oscura Gallery. Our map app drove us around in circles for a while to find the place, but it was easily recognized with its small herd of horse sculptures in the yard.
The gallery is a small adobe with two rooms devoted to prints. There were quite a few by both Adams and Caponigro and some other well known photographers; all were originals produced and signed by the artists. Print prices ranged from about $3000 and $10,000. Among the prints in the back room there was a big photogravure I had not seen before by Edward Curtis. The gallery owner was busy on her computer and her phone during our visit, but she was welcoming and willing to discuss the photographers and their work.
I had only seen Caponigro's work before in books and online, so I enjoyed seeing some actual prints. I can't say, though, that the prints produced an impression that seemed greatly superior to what one can find in good reproductions in print. In fact, Caponigro seems to have produced his pictures with the intention of presenting them primarily in book form. I only have the small Aperture book of Caponigro's phtographs, so I will look for some of the bigger books such as Master Works from Forty Years or The Wise Silence.
Those eye-watering prices made me conscious of the fact that I really know very little about the economics of galleries. It seems that nearly every other building in Santa Fe is an art gallery; the competition must be fierce. I imagine that walk-in sales must represent a tiny portion of the total.
After visiting the gallery we drove across town to get lunch at a breakfast/lunch place called Cafecito. We had some good empanadas with a pot of mate and an excellent slice of baclava for desert. So, a nice day in Santa Fe which I hope to repeat in the near future.













