1991.111
Devil's Slide Utah, U.P.R.R.
Artist
Carleton Emmons Watkins
(Oneonta, New York, 11/11/1829 - 6/23/1916)
Title
Devil's Slide Utah, U.P.R.R.
Creation Date
1873-1874
Century
19th century
Dimensions
20 9/16 in. x 15 13/16 in. (52.3 cm. x 40.1 cm.)
Classification
Photographs
Creation Place
North America, United States, Utah
Medium and Support
albumen print
Credit Line
Gift of Isaac Lagnado, Class of 1971, in honor of Professor William D. and Alison Shipman
Copyright
Public Domain
Accession Number
1991.111
The late-nineteenth century West was the age of the railroad and photography. Carleton Watkins combines both in this iconic picture. Drawn west in 1851 by the Gold Rush, he stayed in California, where his scenic photographs helped to build support for Yosemite National Park. Yet Watkins also supported himself by photographing for mining and railway companies. Devil’s Slide Utah, U.P.R.R. captures the ambiguities of Watkins’s dual roles. Two parallel but off-kilter limestone strata in Weber Canyon, Utah, slash downward toward the train, stopped mid-transit with the engineer looking at the camera. The composition forces the eye to wander from train and rock to mountain and sky. Likely made to promote Western railway tourism, this image celebrates the very technologies that made the frontier accessible. It also subtly questions if those technologies they might also be the frontier’s undoing.
Object Description
landscape view with train in foreground, river in middleground, and Devil's Slide in background