More than one contributor to Arthur Griffin’s New England: The Four Seasons noticed how much livelier than his or her own essay was Griffin’s laconic yet vividly factual account of when and where and how he took the picture. God is in the details, they say; certainly photographic excellence stems from attention to details. That, […]
By Yankee Magazine
Sep 14 2015
This photo of Waits River, Vermont, from the 1970s
was the cover image for
New England in Focus:
The Arthur Griffin Story.
A native of Lawrence, Mass., and a pioneer in color photography in the 1930s, Griffin (1903–2001) shot for the Boston Globe, Life, Time, and Yankee, among other publications, throughout his long career.
More than one contributor to Arthur Griffin’s New England: The Four Seasons noticed how much livelier than his or her own essay was Griffin’s laconic yet vividly factual account of when and where and how he took the picture. God is in the details, they say; certainly photographic excellence stems from attention to details. That, and a willingness to seize the moment. He has caught on film the New England we all would like to think we live in; but perhaps only he really has lived in it, with a friendly fury that has rendered him ageless.
—“Seizing Moments,” by John Updike, September 1995