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.
His
photographs
were
seen
in
the
Sunday
Sun
numerous
books
and
magazines
on
calendars
as
murals
and
as
framed
prints
decorating
homes.
Aubrey
Bodine's
photographic
career
began
in
1923
when
as
an
office
boy
with
the
Baltimore
Sun
he
submitted
photographs
of
the
Thomas
Viaduct
at
Relay
to
the
editor
of
the
Sunday
paper
and
they
were
published.
From
first
to
last
Aubrey
Bodine
was
a
newspaperman
covering
all
sorts
of
stories
with
his
camera
news
events
famous
people
unusual
places
and
curious
activities.
This
gave
him
opportunities
to
travel
throughout
the
region
and
learn
about
it
in
every
tide
wind
weather
and
season.
Out
of
this
experience
came
remarkable
documentary
pictures
of
farming
oystering
hunting
soap
boiling
blacksmithing
clock
making
bricklaying
and
dozens
of
other
occupations
and
student
nurses
Amish
children
pilots
of
ships
and
planes
country
folk
and
city
folk
wood
sheds
and
cathedrals
wagons
and
railroad
engines
and
in
short
almost
everything
of
interest.
Moreover
the
documentary
pictures
are
of
the
very
finest
quality
often
artistic
in
design
and
lighting
effects
far
beyond
the
usual
standard
of
newspaper
work.
But
Bodine's
talent
ran
deeper
than
this
and
so
did
his
ambition.
He
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.
Bodine
was
a
romantic
pictorialist
and
this
shows
in
his
choice
of
subjects
the
old
times
and
the
old
things
the
beauties
of
nature
man
as
an
individual
and
similar
ideas.
The
pictures
are
usually
quiet
in
mood
partly
because
of
the
subdued
tones
and
partly
because
of
a
low
tension
design
made
of
open
curves
and
natural
perspective.
Not
the
least
of
Bodine's
artistic
ability
was
his
craftsmanship.
He
was
always
experimenting
with
his
tools
but
seldom
made
a
mistake.
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.