Abstraction, Porch Shadows

[1][2] Strand spent the Summer of 1916 at a cottage in Twin Lakes, Connecticut.

Strand's interest and understanding of the cubist esthetics, "abstraction through fragmentation, multiple points of view, and a reduction of people and objects to basic geometry", according to The Art Institute of Chicago website, led him to transform everyday objects, like furniture and crockery, into works of abstract photographic art.

In this case, Strand took aim to a round table located in a terrace porch.

He abandoned the traditional photographic perspective, making the table look inclined, and his use of the light that enters the terrace windows makes for the shadows and the impressive geometrical forms of the picture, including the parallelograms and the large triangle of the right.

[3][4] His colleague Alfred Stieglitz published a print of this photograph at his magazine Camera Work and praised it as "the direct expression of today."

Abstraction, Porch Shadows (1916) by Paul Strand