Minor White
No. 5 from the series “Sound of One Hand Clapping, Sequence 14”
1958-1964
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Minor White
No. 5 from the series “Sound of One Hand Clapping, Sequence 14”
1958-1964
Physical Qualities
Gelatin silver print, Sheet: 309 x 206 mm. (12 3/16 x 8 1/8 in.)
Mount: 485 x 357 mm. (19 1/8 x 14 1/16 in.)
Credit Line
The William G. Baker, Jr. Memorial Fund, and Roger M. Dalsheimer Photograph Acquisitions Endowment
Object Number
2012.174.5
At mid-century White created several “sequences,” ordered series of interrelated photographs. Likening each to “a cinema of stills,” White hoped his viewers would contemplate and appreciate these evocatively titled sequences formally and metaphorically to reach for a higher spirituality. In the 1950s, White became increasingly interested in Buddhism, particularly its Zen tradition. Indeed, the title "The Sound of One Hand Clapping" derives from a well-known Buddhist koan, a paradoxical question or story used to prompt the interrogation of perceived reality. White took the first photograph, which resembles a Buddhist monk’s begging bowl—but which is actually an image of an old water tank—and later recounted how “the rest of the photographs appeared slowly over a two-year period.”
The Baltimore Museum of Art by purchase, 2012; Lucca Di Cecco, Charlottesville, VA; purchased at auction, October 21, 2011, Charleston, West Virginia; Merrill Photo Supply, Charleston, West Virginia
Black, White & Abstract: Callahan, Siskind, White
Inscribed: lower left verso, stamped in black ink: "MINOR WHITE / 72 N. UNION / ROCHESTER 7, N.Y."; lower left verso in black ink: "Seq 14 / 5"
