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Thread: Vittorio Sella

  1. #1

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    Vittorio Sella

    I recently received a copy of the book Summit, of photographs by the mountaineer Vitorrio Sella. Many of his images were made on 30cm by 40cm glass plates, and they are quite beautiful, and least if you appreciate that sort of thing. There are several panoramas created by stitching up to 6 images together the old-fashioned way, and the edges match up quite well. For those who enjoy landscape photography, I can't recommend this book enough.

    For something similar, try Mountain Photography by Bradford Washburn. The reproductions in both books are excellent, in my opinion.

    I have a few photographs by these two, as well as some of my own, in the most recent blog post at my web page.

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  3. #3
    Drew Wiley
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    Re: Vitorrio Sella

    Both those books are among my favorites. Sella once got that glass plate camera at high as 23,000 ft on Chogolisa in the Karakoram. But one of his famous stitched panoramas of the Baltoro Glacier in what is now Pakistan which had a string of roped climbers in the middle distance turned out to be a composite! It was recently discovered that there were no climbers on the original neg, but that those were dubbed in from a different negative taken in the Alps. They look tiny in the Baltoro scene, but if true scale, they would have been about 18 ft tall apiece.

    Another favorite mountain photographer of mine is Yoshikazu Shirakawa, who, like Washburn, did a lot of aerial shots, but in a dramatically different signature style. He has his own dedicated museum in Japan, as does Shiro Shirahata, who did his own Himalayan and Karakoram work land-based entirely in color with a 4X5 Linhof Technika. Both these men had highly funded multiple expeditions with lots of people involved. I finally acquired a copy of Shirahata's Nepal Himalaya book - not as artistic as Shirakawa - but I just wanted to see the documentation of all those magnificent glaciers which are already receding.

    Gosh knows where all my own mtn prints will end up, but those are all from here in the Western US. It's been a healthy lifestyle; but old age eventually catches up with us all.

  4. #4

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    Re: Vitorrio Sella

    The Vittorio Sella exhibition at the Whyte Museum in Banff in 1999 is hands down the very best photo exhibition i've ever seen, (only the Bradford Washburn exhibition also at the Whyte with both Bradford & Barbara present comes close). The Sella collection does not travel out of Italy very often and seeing the big prints is magical. He was a remarkable man. The biography of the Duke of Abruzzi is a good read with photos and lots of mention of Vittorio Sella.

    (https://www.amazon.ca/Duke-Abruzzi-E...s%2C120&sr=8-2

    Neither the photos of Yoshikazu Shirakawa nor Shiro Shirahata have the same effect on me. I had the privilege to guide S. Shirahata in the Canadian Rockies, to photograph Mt Bryce and Mt Alberta. He had a university-age mountaineering club student as a porter and a japanese translator friend of mine along as well. Fording the Sunwapta River on the way to Wooley shoulder without getting his camera gear wet was the crux. SS was a very taciturn man and would sit quietly, waiting for hours before he exposed the first sheet of film.
    Click image for larger version. 

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    Last edited by Greg Y; 26-Apr-2024 at 17:29.

  5. #5

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    Re: Vitorrio Sella

    Thanks for the link.
    I would love to see some of Sella's real prints.
    Was there enough sensitivity outside of the blue in the plates by 1900 that you could employ a yellow filter ? I see some tone in the skies.


    I have the big books on the Himalaya by Shirahata and Shirakawa - found for me by a bookshop on Charing Cross road many years ago.
    Washburn, I knew about from the one shot in Bill Brandt's book 'The Land'. I subsequently bought that 1961 shot as a print from Bradford when he was selling through a gallery in Boston, and I wish I'd bought at least one more of his Alaskan work.

  6. #6

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    Re: Vitorrio Sella

    I always loved this Washburn photo of the Doldenhorn in the Swiss Alps, but at the time when Bradford Washburn was still alive the silver gelatin print was $500.( a lot of cash for someone with a young family. But there is an original of the photo hanging in the CMH Bugaboo Lodge where i worked)... Bradford Washburn also led a very adventurous life, starting as a teenager climbing serious routes in the French Alps in 1929 (!) with now-famous guides. He wrote a "boys" book titled "Among the Alps with Bradford." https://www.amazon.com/s?k=among+the...ref=nb_sb_noss
    Click image for larger version. 

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  7. #7
    Drew Wiley
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    Re: Vitorrio Sella

    Oh, that's one of my favorites too. ... but not as posted on the web .... It looks like there is a massive toothed piranha-ogre face on the glacier below, about to devour them! I never noticed that in the book reproduction. Now I've probably ruined it for everyone, pointing that out.

    Greg - It's sure interesting you had a chance to guide Shirahata. I didn't bother buying his Rockies book. I like my own Rockies pictures a lot more, especially since they're mainly in black and white. Both of those Japanese photographers have now passed away. Shirakawa's Linhof aerial shots of the K2 area were apparently published only in German; perhaps Linhof was one of his sponsors on that project. All the other aerials - North America, Himalayas, and Alps, were taken with Pentax 6x7 gear, and those books are much more common. Gutsy gritty shots in Shirakawa's case. Some of the Alps color shots are conspicuously color filter altered. But those two men weren't lifetime printmakers.

    Washburn, however, was a serious technician, and had access to high-end equipment. If you compare his largest prints to AA's from the same era, the Washburn ones are far better detailed.

    Whymper was of course the first to climb the Matterhorn; but Sella was the first to traverse it. A classic book I liked reading was Rebuffat's "Starlight and Storm'; I think he was the first to climb the N. Face of the Matterhorn. But I'm sure glad the US didn't adopt the pattern of the European Alps with rotating restaurants atop summits, linked by trams, and train tunnels through classic peaks. And thank goodness Disney never turned Mineral King into a ski resort. I don't know if the road into there will even be open this year yet due to last winter's avalanches.

    Sella was more the pioneer, both in mountaineering and with a camera. Shirakawa went though quite a bit of weather misery to find the tripod spot of Sella's famous Jannu shot, and to replicate the same light with both color and IR b&w film, in a deliberate homage to Sella. Now there's a darn trekking company hut atop that pass, or at least a nearby location!

    Mark - No filters; clouds in skies were often dubbed in during printing back in blue sensitive plate days. Sella did that kind of thing as precisely as one would expect from Uelsmann. But mainly, he just left things alone, yet still managed to get a compelling sense of shimmering ice and grand atmosphere. Yep, one of the best ever; and he never read a single line of AA's 3-volume how-to series.

  8. #8

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    Re: Vitorrio Sella

    DW, The Schmid brothers did the first ascent of the Matterhorn N Face in 1931 (Rebuffat was 10 yrs old).
    The adventures of the Duke of Abruzzi and Vittorio Sella are legendary. The Duke of Abruzzi was a professional military man and in fact the commander in chief of the Italian Navy during WW1. If there were ever two men I'd have liked to have dinner with it's got to be D of Abruzzi & V Sella!
    V Sella did the first winter ascent of the Matterhorn and the first winter traverse of Mont Blanc.

  9. #9

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    Re: Vitorrio Sella

    That's a stupidly-doctored version of Washburn's Doldenhorn shot. I just checked around the corner in the living room - for starters it's a landscape format ! ( & no piranha present )
    The print quality on the real one is as good as it gets, it's the standard I aspire to. My print is an 11x14" shot from a 9x7" original, I believe.

    What size was Sella taking ?

    Fascinating info on this thread, btw.

  10. #10

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    Re: Vitorrio Sella

    Yes the Doldenhorn photo is spectacular & the Washburn prints were superb....before his son-in-law ? took over and made a separate business of it. The one i'm familiar with was a 1999 (circa) print. Sella was using 11"x14" cameras....& you likely know, processing on site wherever he was in a darkroom tent!
    I can't exactly remember the exhibition print sizes but they were enlargements and the famous Baltoro glacier panorama photo was breath taking!
    Click image for larger version. 

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    * framing more like this one
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    Last edited by Greg Y; 24-Apr-2024 at 16:09.

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