
Clark Winter American, b. 27/10/1951
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Paper: 40.6 x 50.8 cm / 16 x 20 in
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A two-lane ribbon cuts through flat farmland, and a lone sedan pulls away beneath a sky vast enough to swallow both traveler and road. Clark Winter arrests the instant when movement turns dreamlike: the car is already receding, yet it seems weightless, hovering between the known and the imagined horizon.
Power poles stride alongside the pavement like silent metronomes, their wires drooping in a diagonal that mirrors the earth’s slight curve. On the right, a clutch of bare trees and a low barn moor the scene to human scale; on the left, freshly turned fields slip past without a landmark, exaggerating the highway’s infinity. Winter lets the pale roadway glow while a darker band of sky settles over the scene like a drawn curtain, hinting at weather and at the uncertainties of the early 1970s.
The photograph sits at the edge of an era when the automobile still embodied uncomplicated freedom. The first oil crisis had yet to bite, and environmental worries had not dulled America’s appetite for asphalt horizons. Winter, only in his twenties and moving fluidly between finance and art, understood that the car had become a mobile room where private hopes met public space. His lens doesn’t celebrate horsepower; it studies perspective, rhythm, and the almost musical way infrastructure subdivides open land.
Everything in the frame converges toward a vanishing point that never arrives. The sedan, centered yet small, is both protagonist and punctuation mark, suggesting that stories on the road are authored more by landscape than by those who cross it. Winter preserves that tension: liberty versus isolation, progress versus emptiness. We are beckoned to follow yet warned that arrival is merely a pause before the next stretch of road.
Half a century later, Passing Car reads less as document than quiet prophecy. It reminds us how swiftly motion becomes memory, and how an ordinary drive can distill a moment when forward still felt like the only direction.