The Photography of Richard Shute
Introduction to the Richard G. Shute Exhibit
| Introduction | Biography | Shute's Place in History | The Exhibit |

Richard G. Shute and his father Charles ran a photography studio from approximately 1858-1877. During that time period they witnessed the evolution of photographic methods and use, photographic styles, and popular taste.
While the Shute family is not considered to be a major contributor to the development of American photography in the nineteenth century, their artistic and commercial work does document consumer tastes, patterns of consumption, regional photography, and the influence of national artistic trends on local artists. Moreover, the Shute collection offers insights into the social and economic changes that the island experienced in the late nineteenth century.
These commercial photographers recorded island events and history for families and organizations, but these images are not simply a reproduction of daily life on Martha's Vineyard. The Shute family photo studio was influenced by nineteenth century artistic trends in painting and photography, and Richard seems to, at times, project a pastoral or nostalgic "gaze" on his subjects that appears to reference the neo-Romantic movement.
Interestingly enough, Shute's efforts at composing landscapes are almost subverted by the changes in island life and industry. While attempting to hearken back to mid-century America, the actual photographs serve as evidence of the changes in the island's economy, social relations, and physical landscape of the island. After his father's death in 1877, Richard G. Shute continued working with paper photography until his own death in 1923.
Most of the images in the exhibit date between 1870 and the turn of the century. The exhibition serves as a visual narrative of the island that begins with Gay Head and concludes with Vineyard Haven. The images that follow represent digital surrogates of photographic prints of the Richard G. Shute glass plates. The collection contains approximately 500 images and glass plate negatives and positives, ca. 1870-1899 and is housed at the Martha's Vineyard Museum's Gale Huntington Library.