Winston Swift Boyer

Winston Swift Boyer (born June 25, 1954) is an American fine art photographer living in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, and is best known for his color photography of landscapes in the United States and Europe. Boyer's first gallery exhibition was in 1979. He has exhibited in Paris, Canada, New York City, Massachusetts, and California. His work is included in permanent collections in the Crocker Art Museum, Brooklyn Museum and the Art Institute of Chicago. Boyer is the author of American Roads, published by Little, Brown and Company, Bullfinch Press, a photographic chronicle of driving tours through the United States.[2]

Winston Boyer
Boyer in 2011
Born
Winston Swift Boyer

(1954-06-25) June 25, 1954
Education
Known forLandscape photography
SpouseKathleen N. Manson
AwardsFinalist in Ilfochrome's Cibachrome National Awards[1]
Websitewinstonboyer.com

Early life

Boyer's photo of La Sal Mountains, Moab, Utah

Boyer was born on June 25, 1954, in Great Falls, Montana. He is the son of Winston Philip Boyer (1915–2000) an inventor,[3] geologist, and prospector, and Josephine "Josie" Swift (1921–2012) granddaughter of Arthur G. Leonard, president of the Chicago Stockyards.[4] At a very early age Boyer moved to Moab, Utah, with his family where his father prospected for uranium. At age 10 his parents divorced, and Josephine took the family to Pebble Beach, California, and moved the family in with her mother. Josephine became a school teacher and then moved the family to Carmel-by-the-Sea, California.[5]

Boyer attended Robert Louis Stevenson School in Pebble Beach.[6] His brother, Jonathan, is a former professional cyclist who, in 1981, became the first American to participate in the Tour de France.[7][8]

As a teenager, Boyer attended a workshop at Point Lobos led by landscape photographer Ansel Adams. He attended Monterey Peninsula College, then traveled in Mexico and Guatemala and the United States before enrolling in the film department at San Francisco State University and later at the University of California, Santa Cruz, where he studied art history and cinematography. At UC Santa Cruz, Boyer studied art history under Mary Holmes[9] and film history under Tim Hunter in the early 1970s.[10][11][12]

Career

In 1974, Boyer visited his brother in France and got a job as a sports photographer covering bicycle racing.[11] From 1976 to 1979, Boyer traveled to Italy, Germany, and France as a sports photographer for European and American publications. In 1984, he worked as a photographer for CBS Sports for the 1984 Tour de France.[13] During these times in Europe he compiled fine art photographs of European landscapes, peoples, architecture, and exhibited in both American and European galleries.[10] His Night Angel, a twilight photograph of an apartment building from Nice, France, and California Coastal Vista from Morro Bay, California, appeared in the publication of Time Life Books' 1981, in the chapter "The Artistry of Master Printmakers".[7][14]

Ansel Adams attended Boyer's 1981 exhibition at the Sunset Center in Carmel.[7] When Adams died on April 22, 1984, Boyer attended a reception five days later, with friends and fellow professionals, to open the Friends of Photography memorial exhibition for Adams at the Sunset Center. Boyer exhibited with the Friends of Photography organization in 1980 and 1985.[15]

In the mid-1980s, while living in New York, Boyer received an advance from the Bulfinch Press imprint of Little, Brown and Company to travel the United States and assemble 64 photographs for the book American Roads. Travel writer and historian William Least Heat-Moon wrote the introduction to American Roads and said:

Boyer has captured the beauty of an America that cannot be enjoyed from a commercial jetliner or along major highways linking population centers. Boyer's work emerges as a metaphor for America: a land of pioneers and settlers, travelers and adventures.[16]

Boyer was a senior photography director for an early online editorial fashion e-magazine called Fashionlines, from the late 1990s to the early 2000s.[17] His portfolio includes the Ocean Series, Mask Series, American Landscape, Vertigo Series, Cannery Row, American Facades, The Views, European Gallery, and Eritrea, Africa.[7] While living on Garrapata Ridge in Big Sur for fourteen years, his Ocean Series evolved into large-scale photographs of the sea, sky, and clouds, often at sunset, from vantages in and near Big Sur.[12][18]

In 2015, Boyer travelled to Eritrea, where he photographed the people, landscapes, and architecture including the Hamasien Hotel, Fiat Tagliero Building,[19] large hand-painted signs, street wall murals, Modernist architecture,[20] and handmade terraces. The work was published as a piece called "Inside Eritrea: from tank cemeteries to futuristic architecture-in pictures" by The Guardian.[21]

Boyer is featured in the book California Elegance Portraits from the Final Frontier, by Christine Suppes and Frederic Aranda published by Mondadori, released in March 2021.[22]

Boyer lives in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, with his wife Kathleen and works as a fine art and commercial photographer. He considers color photography his medium, in the past using the Cibachrome printing process and now Archival Art Fine-Art Pigmented prints for the production of his fine art prints.[10][23]

See also

References

  1. "Winston Smith Boyer Showing At Photography West Gallery". Carmel Pine Cone. Carmel-by-the-Sea, California. December 9, 1982. pp. 35, 40. Retrieved August 2, 2022.
  2. Watson, Lisa Crawford (July 6, 2015). Legendary Locals of Carmel-by-the-Sea. Carmel-by-the-Sea, California: Arcadia Publishing Incorporated. ISBN 9781439651179. Retrieved May 1, 2023.
  3. "Patents by Inventor Winston Boyer". Justia Patents. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  4. "Arthur G. Leonard Inducted by 1920". Saddle & Sirloin Portrait Foundation. Louisville, Kentucky. March 18, 2019. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  5. "Winston Philip Boyer". Casper Star-Tribune. Casper, Wyoming. February 13, 2000. p. 13. Retrieved August 1, 2022.
  6. "U.S., School Yearbooks, 1900-1999". Ancestry.com. 2010. Retrieved July 31, 2022.
  7. Dennis Taylor (September 18, 2020). "Carmel's Artists, Hitting the photographer's bullseye" (PDF). Carmel Pine Cone. Carmel-by-the-Sea, California. pp. 25–26. Retrieved August 11, 2022.
  8. McGann, Bill; McGann, Carol (2008). The Story of the Tour de France 1965-2007 · Volume 2. Dog Ear Publishing, LLC. p. 133. ISBN 9781598586084. Retrieved August 11, 2022.
  9. Myrna Oliver (January 28, 2002). "Mary Holmes, 91; Taught Eccentric Theories of Art". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  10. "Winston Swift Boyer". www.winstonboyer.com. Carmel-by-the-Sea, California. Retrieved July 31, 2022.
  11. "Winston Smith Boyer photographs on exhibit". Carmel Pine Cone. Carmel-by-the-Sea, California. December 28, 1978. Retrieved July 31, 2022.
  12. Rick Deragon (July 2, 1989). "Boyer's landscape pictures on view at Carmel Gallery". The Monterey County Herald. Monterey, California.
  13. Time-Life Books (1981). "The Artistry of Master Printmakers". Color. Alexandria, Virginia: Life Library of Photography. pp. 173, 208–209. ISBN 9780380705290. Retrieved August 11, 2022.
  14. "Mrs. Adams offers a photographic tribute to her late husband Ansel". Carmel Pine Cone. Carmel-by-the-Sea, California. May 3, 1984. p. 9. Retrieved August 4, 2022.
  15. Boyer, Winston Swift (1989). American Roads. Canada: Little, Brown and Company, Bullfinch Press. ISBN 9780821217085. Retrieved August 1, 2022.
  16. "Fashionlines.com The e-magazine for the elegant edge". Fashionlines. Stanford, California. August 3, 2022. Retrieved August 3, 2022.
  17. Walter Ryce (October 14, 2014). "Winston Swift Boyer's color-saturated photos from the edge of the continent at Gallery Sur". Monterey County Weekly. Retrieved August 15, 2022.
  18. Ayla Hibri (August 20, 2015). "Fashion, flair and what to wear at Eritrea's largest metal market – in pictures". The Guardian. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  19. "Modernist architecture in Asmara, Eritrea". Africa Research Institute. September 30, 2015. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  20. "Inside Eritrea: from tank cemeteries to futuristic architecture – in pictures". The Guardian. August 17, 2015. Retrieved August 4, 2022.
  21. California Elegance, Portraits From the Final Frontier. Rizzoli. February 23, 2021. ISBN 9788891829801. Retrieved July 31, 2022.
  22. "What Is A Fine-Art Pigment Print?". www.collective.com. Retrieved September 1, 2022.
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