Chris McCaw (born 1971) is an American photographer whose work is held in many public collections.
McCaw was born in Daly City, California, in 1971. He has a BFA from the Academy of Art College in San Francisco. [1]
McCaw is known for his large-format homemade cameras [2] in which he uses expired gelatin silver photo paper and long exposures to make solarized paper negatives which often include the burned path of the sun within the frame, in a series named Sunburn. [3] McCaw travels to remote places to capture different apparent movements of the sun, including the Arctic Circle in Alaska, the Galápagos Islands and the Mojave Desert. [4] McCaw's earlier work used a 7×17 inch view camera to create large-format negatives from which he made platinum prints. [5] Projects following Sunburn include work with a modified Cirkut camera, resulting in exposures that can take more than 24 hours. [6] A series titled Poli-optic employs a homemade camera with a grid of lenses. [7] Finally, the series Heliograph includes work in which there are multiple exposures of the sun on the same paper negative. [8]
McCaw's best known project is titled Sunburn. [9] The Metropolitan Museum of Art writes about the series that:
In 2003 McCaw, a photographer based in San Francisco, began taking pictures of the sun. Using large-format cameras that he builds himself, McCaw works outdoors, usually in the desert or by the sea. Instead of film, he places photographic paper in the camera so that each picture he creates is a unique paper negative. His exposures often last four hours or more. McCaw calls these works "Sunburns" because the rays of the sun, magnified by the camera's lens, actually scorch the paper negative, sometimes burning all the way through the paper base. The intensity of the light also causes solarization, reversing the tonal values so that the negative print appears as a positive image. [10]
McCaw's work is held in the following permanent collections:
Chris McCaw (born 1971) is an American photographer whose work is held in many public collections.
McCaw was born in Daly City, California, in 1971. He has a BFA from the Academy of Art College in San Francisco. [1]
McCaw is known for his large-format homemade cameras [2] in which he uses expired gelatin silver photo paper and long exposures to make solarized paper negatives which often include the burned path of the sun within the frame, in a series named Sunburn. [3] McCaw travels to remote places to capture different apparent movements of the sun, including the Arctic Circle in Alaska, the Galápagos Islands and the Mojave Desert. [4] McCaw's earlier work used a 7×17 inch view camera to create large-format negatives from which he made platinum prints. [5] Projects following Sunburn include work with a modified Cirkut camera, resulting in exposures that can take more than 24 hours. [6] A series titled Poli-optic employs a homemade camera with a grid of lenses. [7] Finally, the series Heliograph includes work in which there are multiple exposures of the sun on the same paper negative. [8]
McCaw's best known project is titled Sunburn. [9] The Metropolitan Museum of Art writes about the series that:
In 2003 McCaw, a photographer based in San Francisco, began taking pictures of the sun. Using large-format cameras that he builds himself, McCaw works outdoors, usually in the desert or by the sea. Instead of film, he places photographic paper in the camera so that each picture he creates is a unique paper negative. His exposures often last four hours or more. McCaw calls these works "Sunburns" because the rays of the sun, magnified by the camera's lens, actually scorch the paper negative, sometimes burning all the way through the paper base. The intensity of the light also causes solarization, reversing the tonal values so that the negative print appears as a positive image. [10]
McCaw's work is held in the following permanent collections: