Edward Weston: Becoming Modern
Published on the occasion of the exhibition Edward Weston: Becoming Modern held at the Maison Européenne de la Photographie in Paris, from October 15, 2025, to January 25, 2026.
Drawn entirely from the prestigious collection of the Wilson Centre for Photography, this publication highlights a decisive turning point in the history of photography. Outlining Weston’s radical shift from a refined, pictorialist style inspired by the codes of painting to a pared-down, precise, and direct modernist aesthetic
It was during this period that the photographer refined his style, simplifying his framing, eliminating any artifice to focus on lines, shapes, and light. He photographed ordinary objects–shells, vegetables, bodies, stones–with great formal rigour, transforming reality into visual motifs.
Through more than one hundred vintage prints, this unique exhibition brings together iconic works that have rarely, if ever, been shown in Paris. Alongside Weston’s masterpieces are major works in the pictorialist style by Edward Steichen, Alfred Stieglitz, and Anne Brigman, among others, offering a rich and unique perspective on two major conceptions of photography.
Weston contributed to this modern perspective on the periphery of the art world. He lived and worked in California, travelling to Mexico and distancing himself from the centres of power and influence. He sought neither effect nor provocation, but rather an accurate view, a form of silent revelation.
Edition of 1000
23.5 x 28 cm, portrait
148 pages
ISBN 978-1-917282-23-9
Published in collaboration with MEP, Paris