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Rangefinder
Magazine
July 2004
Quizzical Eye by Lou Jacobs Jr.
The Photography of
Rondal Partridge
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| “Riding the Freights,” Yuba County,
CA, 1940. Ron says, “Riding the freights was rough stuff. You
had to watch out for the railroad guards and the small-town police.
Everywhere were signs saying ‘Keep Moving.’” |
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In 1932 when Ron Partridge was 15, Ansel Adams, Willard
Van Dyke, Imogen Cunningham and Edward Weston formed a group they named “f/64,” and
the first exhibition of their “straight” photography, as
opposed to soft-focused and romanticized, was held at the De Young Museum
in San Francisco, CA. Ron isn’t certain he saw the show because
Imogen was his mother, and the exhibition was “just another show” at
the time. Ron’s father, Roi, was an etcher and taught art at Mills
College in Oakland, CA. Considering the pervasive influence of fine photography,
it’s not surprising that as a teen Ron borrowed a camera from his
mother and began taking pictures. He did his own darkroom work, learned
from his mother over the years, and sold prints to classmates and neighbors.
At age 17 Ron began assisting Dorothea Lange occasionally.
She was a stellar photographer for the FSA (Farm Security Administration)
who eventually
had an enormous positive influence on Ron, as did his mother. All the
above information I learned from the lively and lovely book, Quizzical
Eye, that displays Ron’s delightful work (Heyday Books, Berkeley,
CA, 2003). This is the first collection ever published of the 85-year-old
photographer’s images, all black and white. The handsome book offers
first-rate examples of intimate portraits, environmental statements,
whimsical reportage and a variety of photographs from his life and times.
There’s a foreword by Ron’s old friend Daniel Dixon (Lange’s
son), an essay by the noted photographic historian Sally Stein and a
charming afterward by Elizabeth Partridge (Ron’s daughter). Everyone’s
words help illuminate the psyche and style of the veteran Partridge,
who in his career has been at home with 35mm, medium and large formats.
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| “Potato Field
Madonna,” Kern County, CA, 1940. The influence of Dorothea
Lange, who Ron assisted, seems evident in this and other journalistic
images of the 1940s era. Lange and Partridge worked well together
and were life-long friends. |
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When
Ron graduated from high school in 1936, for a change of pace he chose
to follow the California rodeo circuit to photograph cowboys in
and out of action. At season’s end, he returned to Berkeley to
assist Lange for a dollar a week including food and cigarette money.
The
next year he assisted Ansel Adams in Yosemite where Adams had a studio.
Elizabeth says that Ron and Adams got along best in the field because
Adams wanted things quite precise in the office and darkroom. The next
year Adams fired Ron for, let’s say, insubordination. “Though
they remained lifelong friends,” says Elizabeth, “[they]
never worked together again. Their styles were just too different.”
Ron
also assisted Horace Bristol, a San Francisco photographer who did magazine
assignments and was later one of the original photojournalists
for Time/LIFE magazine. By 1940 Ron began doing photo stories through
Black Star, still a prominent New York assignment agency today, and he
also worked for the NYA, the National Youth Administration in the West.
Essayist Stein says she found a “stunningly fresh” set of
Ron’s photographs in the NYA archives that showed “remarkable
self assurance.” I would guess encouragement from his mother and
his years with Lange had contributed strongly to the young man’s
confidence and image-making skills. Elizabeth says Ron and Lange had
a “rich, complex relationship—part mentor and student, part
mother and son, and eventually, part colleagues.”
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| “New Chevy,” Emeryville, CA, 1964. Ron
says, “Look at that Billboard rising up from the junkyard!
In 10 years that car will be in the junkyard, not on the billboard.” |
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Lange’s
FSA efforts had Ron drive her in search of migrant camps. Elizabeth writes, “At
the end of one long day of shooting, Dorothea and Ron pulled into one
of [California’s] Central Valley cheap
motor courts and went into the office to register. The clerk looked over
at Ron, 20 years younger than Dorothea, and his eyebrows shot up. Dorothea
glanced at the clerk, then signed the guest books with a flourish: ‘Dorothea
Lange and Fancy Man.’”
The photographic approaches Ron learned
from Adams and Lange were quite different, Elizabeth says. “Ansel
likened the negative to a musical score, and he considered the print
to be the musical performance: a beautiful,
resonant print was his object. Dorothea wanted people to look at one
of her photographs and have it hit them in the solar plexus, but the
message conveyed by the photograph was all that mattered.” Many
of Ron’s images also live up to that same intention.
Before Pearl
Harbor, Ron married Elizabeth Woolpert, a law student, and joined the
Navy as a photographer. Brought up to be independent and sometimes
rebellious, qualities Imogen tried to encourage, Ron’s Navy experience
was sometimes unpleasant. After the war he was delighted to get back
to a life in photography where his role models put great value on “personal
and artistic autonomy,” as Stein states. It seems understandable
that Ron has gone through life as a genial, empathetic, rugged individualist
who took pictures in his own way, which was not always unique, but usually
thoughtful. While Stein met Ron late in his life, she attests, “As
photography [became] increasingly established as an art form [in the
preceding half century, Ron] had sustained a single-minded passion for
the medium while inexplicably avoiding the spotlight.”
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| “Ansel Adams in the Sierra,” late
1930s. Ron Partridge assisted Adams in the late 1930s, and they
climbed
around Yosemite where he photographed the master at work. |
“Brickyard Worker,” 1962.
When Ron visited India in 1962 to photograph buildings for architects,
this brickyard worker
in New Delhi was a somewhat unwilling subject. |
Quizzical Eye includes photographs
that exemplify Ron Partridge’s variety of photo subjects. This young lady
was a friend of Ron’s daughter Joan, and the child, born
in 1976, now works at the New Yorker. |
Stein found
Ron gregarious, with an abundance of energy, and he was brimming with
stories. In preparation for this book, Ron showed her 1950s family-life
pictures, shots of pollution in San Francisco Bay, “portraits of
anybody who had wandered into his house and agreed to sit before his
antique view camera” and numerous self portraits snapped over seven
decades. One such image appears dramatically on the panoramic title pages.
More recent close-up pictures “oscillated between the gorgeous
and the grotesque,” says Stein, who adds that the loveliest of
his pictures are nature studies that show a kinship with his mother’s
photography. Some are platinum prints, some seem poetic and many are
related to documentary images that help give the book sparkle.
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| Titled “Meg Reaching, Late 1950s,” this
beautiful moment in Ron’s daughter’s life is a marvelous
example of fine art and reportage combined. |
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“
Overall,” Stein opines, “the contradictions [in Ron’s
subjects and photographic approaches] seemed enormous, but Ron took such
pleasure in the jaggedly eclectic whole.” For Stein, and myself
as well, it is difficult to place Ron’s work in any one category.
Nor are the book’s images all laid out chronologically, which is
appealing. Four pages of whimsical self-portraits are followed by a shot
of Adams in the Sierra in the late 1930s. Shortly after that is a neat
photo of Lange on top of a station wagon about to pull a black cloth
over her 4x5 with its long bellows extended. There are also location
portraits of Depression-era Californians, in striking FSA style, and
a lovely late 1950s view of a hill from Ron’s studio at the time.
His wife and five children were often targets for imaginative candids.
By
1969 Ron had turned to environmental portraits of artists and others,
using both medium format and 35mm. Another occupational specialty was
architecture, a few examples of which are in the book, showing his graphic
sense of design. There are also examples of assorted power lines, part
of a project he photographed for several decades, plus pattern shots
of parking lots, an auto junkyard, late 1960s freeway interchanges and
ticky-tack Daly City row houses.
Further examples of Ron’s artistic
documentation include beautiful rolling hills, mud flats, close-ups of
tools and a mystery photo of Judy
Dater behind an 8x10 with dark slide hiding her face. Ron’s daughters
became photogenic subjects, and there’s a thoughtful and elegant
portrait of Lange in the early 1960s. While some of Ron’s early
photographs are satiric, Stein says his pictures of Lange “consistently
express admiration and often awe.” I met her only once at a party
where we had time to sit on the floor and chat, and I feel “awe” is
quite appropriate.
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| “Pave It and Paint It Green.” In the
mid-1960s Ron was prescient when he shot a crowded parking lot in
Yosemite National Park. |
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More images from the book include: a profile portrait
of Imogen right side up and upside down, titled “Queen of Tarts”;
pattern images of shells; sleek close-ups of a dog named Chester; leaves
and
flowers; some artful still lifes—two including dead birds; and
one of the most engaging shots of all—a little girl gleefully reaching
up to pet a dark horse.
An endearing shot of Ron’s wife handing a baby to her great grandmother
was chosen for the historic “Family of Man” exhibition in
1955.
Lange longed to devote herself to “a visual life,” says
Stein, and studying Ron’s archive of photographs gave Stein a sense
of what that might mean. She explains of Ron, “This early protégé of
Lange treated photography from the outset as a means of exploring all
manner of experience in his immediate world.” Early on he had gone
to New York to be closer to Black Star, but story assignments reminded
him of regimentation, and he hastened back to the still-rural hills behind
Berkeley.
In 1959 the Partridge family moved to a large home in
Berkeley, described by Elizabeth in her anecdotal, nostalgic, revealing
Afterward,
which
includes a family history. She recalls moving from a rural home into
a posh Berkeley neighborhood—”four raggedy children, two
dogs, a wild assortment of country cats and my father’s three Cadillac
limousines… one to run and two to cannibalize for parts.” Other
fathers wore suits to work in the city. Her father was around at home,
played a “sweet guitar,” and sang when he said good night,
then headed for the darkroom where he often stayed until midnight. While
Ron photographed buildings for architects during the week, weddings on
weekends and portraits when he could squeeze them in, money was “painfully
tight.” Elizabeth promised herself never to be self-employed.
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| “Rolling Hills,” 1958. In the San Francisco
Bay area were many fine art photographers whose work may have been
admired by Ron, who interpreted these lovely rolling hills near Danville,
CA, with a view camera. |
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Warmly,
Stein writes that Ron “readily acknowledges his addition
to photography, and he has no desire to wean himself of the daily habit
of exposing and developing film and making his now-customary platinum
prints. Though he still prowls the flea markets… since the mid-1980s
he has made an increasing number of his photographs on a crowded table
in one light-filled corner of his spacious living room.” She states
that some of Ron’s compositions are classical; some are weird.
He shoots flowers in states of decay, and he communes in his mind with
Weston, who made exquisite studies of shells and peppers.
I knew of Ron
Partridge, but his photography was new to me, though I have several hundred
photographic books in my library, and it may also
be a treat to you. He shoots like a photojournalist but didn’t
want to work steadily in that discipline. His black-and-white landscape
and close-up work is exemplary. He makes thoughtful portraits and engaging
self-portraits. Elizabeth, who knows and admires him as a person and
as her father, says that he carries with him the knowledge of outstanding
California photographers whose imagery and philosophy rubbed off on him.
Now it filters through “his own inimitable sense of being.”
Ron
and his work are a bridge from the calm past into a more hectic present
for the benefit of all who enjoy this book’s collection.Lou Jacobs
Jr. is the author of 25 how-to photography books, the latest of which,
Photographer’s Lighting Handbook (Amherst Media) was recently published.
He has taught at UCLA and Brooks, is a longtime member of ASMP, and enjoys
shooting stock during his travels in the U.S. and abroad.
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