Information and discussion on all aspects of British photographic history
Time: May 6, 2010 to June 5, 2010
Location: Stephen Bulger Gallery
Street: 1026 Queen Street West
City/Town: Toronto, Canada M6J 1H6
Website or Map: http://www.bulgergallery.com/
Phone: Toronto (Canada): 416.504.0575
Event Type: exhibition
Organized By: Stephen Bulger Gallery
Latest Activity: May 6, 2010
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Stephen Bulger Gallery is proud to present the first international exhibition and sale of vintage prints from the Image Collection at the National Geographic Society. The exhibition will feature approx 80 unique vintage black & white prints representing the earliest days of the Society (founded in 1888) through the 1940s. It will present a selection of premier examples of the most aesthetically and historically significant prints in the collection.
The Pervasive View: Vintage Prints from the National Geographic Image Collection is comprised of sets of photographic prints by over a dozen photographers associated with the Society. The exhibition will include images from Canada and from around the world and from several genres, including exploration, discovery, anthropology, aeronautics, and portraiture. Many of these images have never been published. Many have never been seen outside the National Geographic Image Collection archive, housed in Washington D.C.
The National Geographic Image Collection houses over 11 million photographs and less than 2 percent have been published. To share its archival heritage, National Geographic is now initiating a concerted program to proliferate the treasures of the Image Collection through fine art exhibitions and sales to museums and private collectors. This is only the second exhibition of its kind and it accompanies the publication of National Geographic Image Collection (516 pages, over 300 photographs), published in the fall of 2009.
The bodies of work presented are diverse. The Alexander Graham Bell Collection is a group of photographs by Bell and his assistants of their flight experiments utilizing tetrahedral structures, 1907-09. Baron Wilhelm von Gloeden's portrayals of the classicized youth of Sicily were featured in the December 1909 issue of National Geographic. An integral part of Captain Robert Scott's mission, Herbert Ponting utilized a large 8 x 10 inch negative camera to document the ill-fated expedition to the South Pole, 1910 –13. Using an ingenious trip wire and powdered magnesium, George Shiras III made the earliest images of wildlife by flash, beginning in the 1890s. The publication of these images in 1906 helped spawn the creation of North America's first national parks. Colorful botanist Joseph Rock always traveled with rugs and library as he led National Geographic research expeditions into China, sending tales and hundreds of exotic images to the magazine in the 1920s and 30s. Captain Frank Hurley and A. B. Lewis documented the dress and undress of the natives of Papua New Guinea in the 1920s. Geologist Willis Lee photographed the magnificent domes and caves of the desolate Carlsbad Caverns in 1924.
Photo: Baron Wilhelm von Gloeden - Boy, Taormina, Sicily, circa 1890
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Photographic History Research Centre, Leicester
Birkbeck History and Theory of Photography Research Centre
William Henry Fox Talbot Catalogue Raisonné
British Photography. The Hyman Collection
The Press Photo History Project Mapping the photo agencies and photographers of Fleet Street and the UK
The correspondence of William Henry Fox Talbot
Historic England Archive
UAL Photography and Photography and the Archive Research Centre
Royal Photographic Society's Historical Group
www.londonstereo.com London Stereoscopic Company / T. R. Williams
www.earlyphotography.co.uk British camera makers and companies
Fox Talbot Museum, Lacock.
National Portrait Gallery, London
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Alfred Seaman and the Photographic Convention
Frederick Scott Archer
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