Jack London, Antung Harbor, Manchuria, 1904 (Courtesy of California State Parks, 2018)
Jack London, View of the Snark at sea, c 1907 (Courtesy of California State Parks, 2018)
Jack London, Roamer, Sonoma Creek, delta, “Wingo” landscape, 1911-1914 (Courtesy of California State Parks, 2018)
Jack London, Portuguese Fieldworker & children, Oahu, HI, 1907
Jack London, SF Earthquake Ferry Bldg at center, 1906 (Courtesy of California State Parks, 2018)
exhibition
|
01.20.18 - 04.15.18

An Eye for Adventure

Photographs by Jack London

Jack London (1876-1916) is revered as the quintessential American novelist and short story writer, and in the Sonoma area he is a renowned native son. His internationally celebrated literary works include The Call of the WildThe Sea WolfWhite Fang, and Martin Eden. Less well known are London’s concurrent explorations in photography. This exhibition will introduce an array of the writer’s photographs gathered from his adventures as a war correspondent and global sailor. Included are views from the Russo-Japanese War, San Francisco’s 1906 earthquake and fire, and visits to Hawaii and the South Seas islands. They reveal London’s avid curiosity, his perceptive and compassionate eye, and his remarkable comprehension of the then-new art of photography.

Curated by Helaine Glick