Guy Kendall's Photography
Exploring Guy Kendall’s photographic work starting in 1924, the viewer watches the progression from posed still shots of horses with their trainer/drivers to action shots which capture the excitement of races at the finish line. Through the albums, one is able to watch the growth of relationships between Kendall and the horsemen and women of the southern Maine fair circuit as remote, documentary snaps of horses and drivers become intimate portraits both at the race track and on area farms.
Kendall’s career at the track was put on pause in 1928 as he courted and then married Ruth B. Bennett. Kendall’s work resumed in the album labeled 1930a, where it is possible to see a quantum leap in the quality of his composition from images that were simply a matter of record to those with genuine artistic flair.
According to his niece, Anne Kendall Holmbom, Kendall used a Graflex box camera and glass negatives to capture many of his early photographs. He developed, printed, and re-touched all his photographs personally in his studio located on Congress Street in Portland, Maine.
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Miss Patchen — Russell up
Owner: E. E. Russell
Driver: Russell
Race: 2.23 Trot & Pace
Date: 9-17-1930 -
Miss Peter Lincoln
Owner: E. Stanley
Driver: Unknown
Race: 2.18 Pace Stake, Waterville, Maine, August 29, 1924
Date: 8-29-1924 -
Miss Peter Lincoln — Hayes up
Owner: E. Stanley
Driver: Hayes
Race: Oxford County Fair 2.18 Pacing Stake
Date: 9-13-1924 -
Miss Vermont
Owner: E. P. Cray
Driver: W. Utton
Race: Two Year Olds Trotting One Mile
Date: 7-30-1936 -
Miss Vermont wins
Owner: E. P. Cray
Driver: W. Utton
Race: Trotters with Records Slower than 2.03
Date: 7-19-1939