101665901

Vendu
Michael Joseph (1941-) - Very blue ready to dive - Playboy Pool Ladies
Offre finale
€ 123
Il y a 17 h

Michael Joseph (1941-) - Very blue ready to dive - Playboy Pool Ladies

Pool Ladies – Ready to Dive, Clapham Common Photograph taken in the 1980s Photographer: Michael Joseph Medium: Original unique forced blue darkroom test print (matt finish) Signature: Signed and titled in ink on the front Mount: Bespoke mount by professional framer, taped as fitted Series: From the Clapham Common swimming pool series This striking photograph captures the precise suspended instant before entry — a disciplined line of swimmers poised at the edge of the Clapham Common pool, bodies angled forward in unified concentration. Arms sweep back. Toes grip the block. Spines arc in readiness. The image holds that electric fraction of a second before motion breaks the surface. What makes this particular print exceptional is its forced blue tonal treatment — a rare experimental darkroom test produced on standard matt relatively thin paper. The entire composition is immersed in aquatic cobalt. The blue does more than colour the scene; it transforms it. Flesh becomes sculptural. Light becomes liquid. The swimmers appear almost submerged before they have even left the blocks. The tonal shift heightens anticipation and deepens the elemental quality of the image. Joseph positions the viewer directly along the starting line, compressing the bodies into a rhythmic sequence of repeating forms — shoulders, hips, caps, goggles — each figure echoing the next. Geometry governs the composition: the horizontal of the pool edge, the vertical beams, the diagonals of limbs in tension. It operates simultaneously as athletic documentation and formal abstraction. Unlike Joseph’s more widely recognised scenes of social vitality — musicians mid-performance, banquet tables animated by gesture and noise — this work is about control and collective focus. There is no splash, no applause, no spectacle. Only breath, tension, discipline. Within this series, his admiration for Bill Brandt is subtly evident. The human figure becomes architectural; bodies are treated as compositional structures. Negative space is weighted with precision. The swimmers are not individual portraits but a unified sculptural arrangement rendered with modernist restraint. This is not a standard edition print but a unique forced blue test, dating to around 1990. It remains a singular variation having been designed and instigated by the photographer, and offers rare insight into Joseph’s experimental process. The matt surface bears visible handling marks and light scratches — honest signs of a working print that was frequently shown to clients and admirers. These surface traces speak to its life in the studio and to the importance Joseph himself placed upon it. The photograph carries the rare quality of being both formally rigorous and emotionally charged. It preserves not simply a scene, but the instant before transformation — the moment between stillness and plunge. A bold, sculptural and highly distinctive example from the Clapham Common swimming pool series. The piece will be packed with great care and devotion and dispatched promptly, ensuring safe arrival. Offered by the photographer’s daughter, with close attention to the preservation and thoughtful placement of this unique historical print. #MichaelJoseph #PoolLadiesSeries #ClaphamCommon #1980sPhotography #ForcedBluePrint #VintageDarkroom #BritishPhotography #FigurativeModernism #BillBrandtInfluence #ReadyToDive #OriginalPhotograph #CollectorsPhotography #OneOffArtwork

101665901

Vendu
Michael Joseph (1941-) - Very blue ready to dive - Playboy Pool Ladies

Michael Joseph (1941-) - Very blue ready to dive - Playboy Pool Ladies

Pool Ladies – Ready to Dive, Clapham Common
Photograph taken in the 1980s

Photographer: Michael Joseph
Medium: Original unique forced blue darkroom test print (matt finish)
Signature: Signed and titled in ink on the front
Mount: Bespoke mount by professional framer, taped as fitted
Series: From the Clapham Common swimming pool series

This striking photograph captures the precise suspended instant before entry — a disciplined line of swimmers poised at the edge of the Clapham Common pool, bodies angled forward in unified concentration.

Arms sweep back. Toes grip the block. Spines arc in readiness. The image holds that electric fraction of a second before motion breaks the surface.

What makes this particular print exceptional is its forced blue tonal treatment — a rare experimental darkroom test produced on standard matt relatively thin paper. The entire composition is immersed in aquatic cobalt. The blue does more than colour the scene; it transforms it. Flesh becomes sculptural. Light becomes liquid. The swimmers appear almost submerged before they have even left the blocks. The tonal shift heightens anticipation and deepens the elemental quality of the image.

Joseph positions the viewer directly along the starting line, compressing the bodies into a rhythmic sequence of repeating forms — shoulders, hips, caps, goggles — each figure echoing the next. Geometry governs the composition: the horizontal of the pool edge, the vertical beams, the diagonals of limbs in tension. It operates simultaneously as athletic documentation and formal abstraction.

Unlike Joseph’s more widely recognised scenes of social vitality — musicians mid-performance, banquet tables animated by gesture and noise — this work is about control and collective focus. There is no splash, no applause, no spectacle. Only breath, tension, discipline.

Within this series, his admiration for Bill Brandt is subtly evident. The human figure becomes architectural; bodies are treated as compositional structures. Negative space is weighted with precision. The swimmers are not individual portraits but a unified sculptural arrangement rendered with modernist restraint.

This is not a standard edition print but a unique forced blue test, dating to around 1990. It remains a singular variation having been designed and instigated by the photographer, and offers rare insight into Joseph’s experimental process. The matt surface bears visible handling marks and light scratches — honest signs of a working print that was frequently shown to clients and admirers. These surface traces speak to its life in the studio and to the importance Joseph himself placed upon it.

The photograph carries the rare quality of being both formally rigorous and emotionally charged. It preserves not simply a scene, but the instant before transformation — the moment between stillness and plunge.

A bold, sculptural and highly distinctive example from the Clapham Common swimming pool series.

The piece will be packed with great care and devotion and dispatched promptly, ensuring safe arrival.

Offered by the photographer’s daughter, with close attention to the preservation and thoughtful placement of this unique historical print.

#MichaelJoseph
#PoolLadiesSeries
#ClaphamCommon
#1980sPhotography
#ForcedBluePrint
#VintageDarkroom
#BritishPhotography
#FigurativeModernism
#BillBrandtInfluence
#ReadyToDive
#OriginalPhotograph
#CollectorsPhotography
#OneOffArtwork

Offre finale
€ 123
Kai Brückner
Expert
Estimation  € 500 - € 600

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