or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
 
 
Express Checkout with PayPhrase
What's this? | Create PayPhrase
Sorry!
More Buying Choices
43 used & new from $44.99

Have one to sell? Sell yours here
 
   
David Plowden: Vanishing Point: Fifty Years of Photography
 
See larger image
 
Tell the Publisher!
I’d like to read this book on Kindle

Don’t have a Kindle? Get your Kindle here.
 
  

David Plowden: Vanishing Point: Fifty Years of Photography (Hardcover)

~ (Photographer), Steve Edwards (Introduction)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

List Price: $100.00
Price: $67.50 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
You Save: $32.50 (33%)
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
In Stock.
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com. Gift-wrap available.

Want it delivered Thursday, November 12? Choose One-Day Shipping at checkout. Details
25 new from $63.61 16 used from $44.99 2 collectible from $240.00

Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
  Hardcover $67.50 $63.61 $44.99

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with A Handful of Dust: Disappearing America by David Plowden

David Plowden: Vanishing Point: Fifty Years of Photography + A Handful of Dust: Disappearing America
Price For Both: $101.06

Show availability and shipping details

  • This item: David Plowden: Vanishing Point: Fifty Years of Photography by David Plowden

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
    This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details

  • A Handful of Dust: Disappearing America by David Plowden

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
    This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details


Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought

The Call of Trains: Railroad Photographs by Jim Shaughnessy

The Call of Trains: Railroad Photographs by Jim Shaughnessy

by Jim Shaughnessy
4.9 out of 5 stars (14)  $40.95
Approaching Nowhere: Photographs

Approaching Nowhere: Photographs

by Jeffrey T. Brouws
5.0 out of 5 stars (4)  $40.95
The Life of a Photograph

The Life of a Photograph

by Sam Abell
4.8 out of 5 stars (6)  $26.40
Saul Leiter: Early Color

Saul Leiter: Early Color

by Martin Harrison
4.8 out of 5 stars (4)  $40.95
Ansel Adams: 400 Photographs

Ansel Adams: 400 Photographs

by Andrea Gray Stillman
4.7 out of 5 stars (31)  $26.40
Explore similar items

Editorial Reviews

Product Description

“No one has photographed America as has David Plowden. ... He is one of the great artists of our time.”—David McCullough This beautiful volume is both a tribute to and a celebration of the photographer who, more than anyone else, has given us a visual record of our mark on the land over the last half-century. David Plowden’s beautiful black-and-white images reveal his great respect for man’s ingenuity and honest work, documenting a disappearing landscape of industry, small towns, wonderful devices, and noble structures. David McCullough writes, “Plowden has produced some of the most powerful photographs we have of man-made America. He is propelled, driven, by a sense of time running out and the feeling that he must not just make a record, but confer a kind of immortality on certain aspects of American civilization before they vanish.” As Walker Evans gave us the first half of the twentieth century, David Plowden has given us the second. David Plowden: Vanishing Point represents the best of this magnificent body of work. .


About the Author

David Plowden is the author of more than twenty photography books, including Bridges: The Spans of North America. He lives in Winnetka, Illinois.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 280 pages
  • Publisher: W.W. Norton & Co. (October 17, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0393062546
  • ISBN-13: 978-0393062540
  • Product Dimensions: 12.7 x 11.2 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.9 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #460,708 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

More About the Author

David Plowden
Discover books, learn about writers, read author blogs, and more.

Visit Amazon's David Plowden Page

What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?


Tags Customers Associate with This Product

 (What's this?)
Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
 

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

Sell a Digital Version of This Book in the Kindle Store

If you are a publisher or author and hold the digital rights to a book, you can sell a digital version of it in our Kindle Store. Learn more

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best American photography book of 2007--or the past 10 years, November 4, 2007
I've been buying David Plowden's books since the early 1970's, and often give them to friends simply for the joy of sharing. His books have inspired me and provided hundreds of hours of pleasure.

No book to date, however, approaches this volume. It contains the best portfolio of his photographs to date, and is, by far, the best printed. The printing quality--and the size of the prints--is extraordinary. I've been to several of David Plowden's gallery exhibitions where the prints were a fraction of the sizes of these pages. The printing quality of the Great Lakes tugboat Edna G. on page 67, for example, is amazing.

Hard as it is to remember the recent past, America was once both an industrial power and a land of vibrant small towns and an efficient transportation system. David Plowden photography captures both the sheer majesty of Chicago steel mills and steam driven transportation and the pride and basic workmanship found in even the smallest small town barbershop, hotel, or railroad station.

The interviews, too, lack the artifice of most "essays" that accompany photo books. David Plowden's personality emerges from his words as well as his photographs.

A word about this price. It may be a bit more than most readers are accustomed for paying. However, once you hold this book in your hand, and experience the sheer quality and quantity of images it contains, you'll probably agree that the book is an excellent value. I would rather have this volume than two, or more, lesser books. It is a "keeper" volume that will inspire the next generation of photographers in your family.

If you have any interest at all in black and white photography, or if you have previously found pleasure and inspiration in Walker Evan's photography, you can be guaranteed that this book will be the best photography book you buy this year.

This book has no competition because David Plowden has no competition in documenting the "lost America" of the last 50 years.
Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An elegiac look at America, October 12, 2007
By J. A. Rake (WIsconsin) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
My copy of this exquisite book arrived this morning and I immediately had to sit down with it. It is a beautifully made volume. The print quality is superb: rich black blacks and almost an infinite range of grey tones which bring out the detail in the images. The book is heavy and comfortable in the lap, with pages that open almost totally flat so that the image on them can easily be seen in its entirety. And the images: what a tribute to an artistic life richly lived ----- they are wonderful, deep visual poems about what is disappearing (or has already vanished) in America. The sense of detail on the surfaces of bridges, ships, buildings and the powerful composition of the photographs have much to teach all of us who aspire to make photographs.
Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The best $100 you'll ever spend on a photography book, January 31, 2008
A trip to the photography section of a well-stocked bookstore will yield shelves full of photographer's monographs. Countless spines arrest the eyes, each one vying to be the stylish work that convinces you that this photographer is the American Master.

And then there is David Plowden.

Plowden is one of the few living links between today and the greats of documentarian photography, the geniuses of Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, and others who participated in the Farm Services Administration's photography project during the Great Depression. Their work, seminal to the documentary style, was paradoxically emotive, evoking a minimalistic visual poetry. Plowden -- who struck up a friendship with Evans in the late '50s -- built upon this tradition, mixing a lyric style of photography with a documentary sensibility.

Over the course of his career, Plowden has published numerous books, almost always organized along topical lines: great lakes steam boats, great bridges of North America, vanishing small towns. He also has a fascination for railroads, the first love on which he lavished his camera -- indeed his first published photo was in TRAINS Magazine in 1954. This love expanded to encompass all manner of industrial subjects, from steamships and tugboats to steel mills and grain elevators. Now 76 years old, Plowden is at the end of his career, and it seems natural that he would publish a retrospective volume of his photography. Vanishing Point is that work.

The book opens -- after two images and a table of contents-- with a forward by Richard Snow, formerly the editor of American Heritage. Here Snow ably pens a brief discussion of Plowden's career. The brush strokes are light, and those familiar with Plowden's work might criticize it as being repetitive or unnecessary, but it provides a valuable taste of the text and photos to follow, almost as if it were a kind of abstract of the remaining book. A gentle start: so far, so good.

All this changes changes with the turn of the page and a remarkable 14-page introductory essay by Steve Edwards. Edwards brings his journalist sensibilities to the fore as he spins the story of the life and career of David Plowden. In so many ways, the story the journalist tells seems almost cinematic: a troubled childhood in New England, a youth amongst railroad men, a struggle to study a discipline he hated (economics) at Yale in hopes of making himself a better railroad employee following graduation. The reader is treated to the full transit of the photographer's disillusionment with the railroad world and with more common paths of life that would eventually bring him to photography. And here he works for Winston Link, studies under Minor White, and becomes fast friends with Walker Evans.

Edward's portrait is deftly penned with a light touch and a sensitivity to emotions and motives that makes the reader feel they can get inside -- if only for a brief moment -- the heart and mind of the photographer. He is sympathetic, but candid too; Plowden's single-minded devotion to his art often came at the expense of a relationship with his children and eventually cost him his first marriage. The event is part of a repeating pattern of loss that seems endemic to Plowden's drive. Edwards relates a point in 1960, after Plowden had left the studio of Minor White, feeling he had made a great mistake to study photography. The scene is rural Maine, and the photographer is standing the the cab of a steam locomotive on the very last steam-powered run on the line.

"'While that engine died, I sat in the cab in Brownsville Junction and watched the gauge drop to zero,' [Plowden] says. The loss was palpable; the very thing that had provided so much joy and escape during his troubled childhood had vanished."

In the space of a few short sentences, Edwards gets to the burning core of Plowden's modus operandi.

After this come the photographs themselves. Plowden was once scoffed at for being a "topical" photographer; here he wears this on his sleeve, dividing the book into seven thematic chapters of plates. Each is designated by only a roman numeral, with no title, no explanatory text, no attempt at interpretation. It is only the chapter divider, the plates, and in tiny text at the bottom, a plate number and very cursory caption.

Although railroads were Plowden's first love, they are not the focus of the work, and indeed the images of railroads he presents here are not the strongest images in the book. The most amusing thing about these images is the first plate, a photo of a Great Northern steam-powered freight near Wilmar, Minnesota: it violates nearly every rule of railroad photography convention, with no light on the nose of the locomotive, a broad foreground space of snow and haphazard weeds, and a line of poles and wires directly in front of the engine!

In addition to the train-centric images are more domestic moments, with the engines getting washed, maintained, and fueled by engine terminal crews. These images display a cinematic quality that is similar to Link, and indeed many of the plates date from 1959-1960, around the time of Plowden's association with that famous photographic dramatist. There is, however, one key element that is notably different; while Link resorted to everything short of building a personal hydrogen-powered sun to light his subjects with Hitchcockian precision, Plowden has worked only with available light. The result? His images seem fresher and more natural than Link's, as if the events in them had taken place but a few days ago, rather than decades hence.

Far more stunning than the railroad plates are the nautical images, such as plate 31, "Tugboat Julia C. Moran Undocking Liner, Hudson River, New York City (1975)". We are on the forward deck of a Hudson tug, barely seeing more than a few inches of the con. Out forward is a single man -- one of the few humans that Plowden has included in his Hopperesque de-peopled world -- unwrapping one of the ropes that holds the liner to the tug. And behind hims soars the great silver rivet-speckled bow of the hull of an ocean liner, so massive that her decks and superstructure are lost somewhere in an Olympian height beyond the view of the camera.

Bridges are, of course, one of David Plowden's greatest loves, and with boyish glee he gives us great hulking massive flying piles of steel. My favorite is probably one of the closest to me, an image of Newport, Oregon's Yaquina Bay Bridge shown in plate 61. The photo looks down the empty length of the span, and flanked between two gothic concrete spires curves the steel arch of the main bridge. The top nearly disappears into coastal fog, and the far end is barely even there at all. Beyond, there is no world, no ocean, no hills.

Next comes a chapter on industrial subjects, lead by a large set of photographs of the steel making process. Giant metal buckets, glowing molten steel, flashing dancing sparks. After a tour of this mechanical Hades, Plowden takes us on a journey through a litany of "back end" jobs, a hidden world of industry and commerce that few get to see. We see the great ore docks. We meet the solitary men who work in the bellies of steamships. We walk among lunar piles of coal and of iron ore. We get lost amongst the clinical inhumanity of a nuclear power plant.

The fifth chapter could be best described as wastelands. The images here are perhaps the most complex and most postmodern of the book. This America is one that is decaying, where every house hasn't been painted since FDR was president and each car looks like only Richard Roundtree would want to drive it, if it were still 1975 anyway. The bleakness, the desolation, the emptiness here is almost disturbing. Every now and then, I catch a sensation that reminds me of the empty highway-spaces of Jeff Brouws. There is a vague notion of social commentary emerging here, especially in the few plates here that show people; what is the future of the freckle-faced boy from rural West Virginia in plate 132? What kind of life awaits the girl staring out the window in plate 136? The state of paint and repair of her Pennsylvania home doesn't give much hope of stewardship for the world she is about to inherit. And in plate 143, shot in 1967, even the iconic form of the Statue of Liberty is framed by power poles and trash.

Love re-enters the picture in chapter six. Here is rural America, and rural Americana: the small town main street, the general store, the hardware store. This is the world that is fast fleeting, a victim of a rural populace mystified at the decline of tradition and Main Street while they push their shopping carts down the aisles of Wal-Mart. The shop-keepers -- when they appear at all -- are old, their faces as cracked as the paint of their wooden floorboards. And now and then we get children, too, and an old couple in Iowa who keep a clapboard house with Swiss net curtains, and we get the silence of over-furnished empty front parlors from houses that were built when people knew what the heck the word "parlor" even meant.

Storm clouds on the plains of New Mexico opens up the seventh and final chapter of Vanishing Point. It is the same image that is used on the dust jacket, a powerful, sweeping metaphor for the elegy that is the remainder of the book. From here out, there will be no more people, not a single solitary one. Indeed the only identifiable living creature is a single horse -- pale like that ridden by Death in the Four Horseman of the Book of Revelations. It stares out at us kindly from a single small square window in the side of a barn in plate 221. We are alone now, in the plains, navigating by grain elevators. We walk freely amongst barns and inside of feed mills. It seems that dust still hangs in... Read more ›
Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)


Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
 
 
 
Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Wow!
David Plowden knows how to capture resonant images of America ... mostly those that are rapidly disappearing or have already done so. This book is more than lovely to look at. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Charles A. Schuler

5.0 out of 5 stars mesmerizing...
David Plowden is the contemporary Ansel Adams in the way he captures images. The detail is superb and the overall image mesmerizing. He is also a delightful person! Read more
Published 22 months ago by Jayne

3.0 out of 5 stars Plowden: Vanishing Poin
I'm a great fan of David Plowden's work. I have a copy of his "insights". Images were beautifully reproduced. I wish I could same the same for "Vanishing Point". Read more
Published 23 months ago by Roy Benson

5.0 out of 5 stars Visual Poetry at an amazing price with photo
This photo book is an outstanding value for serious collectors of limited sign and numbered editions. Read more
Published on October 30, 2007 by Robert Gray

Only search this product's reviews



Customer Discussions

This product's forum
Discussion Replies Latest Post
David Plowden 0 September 2007
See all discussions...  
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 


Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
   



So You'd Like to...


Create a guide

Product Information from the Amapedia Community

Beta (What's this?)


Look for Similar Items by Category


Look for Similar Items by Subject

 

Feedback

If you need help or have a question for Customer Service, contact us.
 Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
Is there any other feedback you would like to provide?

Your comments can help make our site better for everyone.


Your Recent History

 (What's this?)

After viewing product detail pages or search results, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.