Michael Pritchard's Posts (3005)

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12201224484?profile=originalHMS Erebus took part in the Ross expedition of 1839–1843, and was abandoned in 1848 during the third Franklin expedition. The sunken wreck was discovered by the Canadian Victoria Strait expedition in September 2014. In a fascinating series of blog posts Professor Russell Potter reports on several visits to see the process of conservation on recovered artefacts. 

One, particularly, is relevant to daguerriean photography. A metal device sparked Potter's interest. He notes: "I was struck at once by the fact that the square seemed similar in proportion to the Franklin daguerreotypes made by the operator from Richard Beard's firm" and thought it might be to do with plate polishing. The hunch was confirmed by Mike Robinson who confirmed it was part of a device patented by John Johnson in 1841 and known to have been used in Richard Beard's studios. 

Potter concludes: "So now we have something we didn't have before: clear evidence that indeed such an apparatus was aboard HMS "Erebus," and that, assuming it was used as intended, Daguerreotypes were almost certainly made during the expedition. It's only one small step to add to the hope that someday such plates may be recovered; if they are, they'll be the earliest photographs ever taken in the Arctic!"

Read the full, illustrated, blog here: https://visionsnorth.blogspot.com/

With thanks to Anne Strathie for the link.

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12201227080?profile=originalSouthport's The Atkinson venue and the Scott Polar Research Institute (SPRI), with Ponting's biographer Anne Strathie, is showing a new exhibition Herbert Ponting: Explorer and Photographer at The Atkinson from 10 June to 2 September 2023.  Ponting's family lived in Southport from the 1880s. 

Alongside the exhibition of photographs and rarely seen artefacts relating to Herbert Ponting are a series of talks and events. 

Ponting’s father was appointed Manager of Preston Banking Company in the 1880s and the family set up home in Park Road West, Southport.  

Herbert Ponting: Explorer and Photographer
10 June-2 September 2023
Free admission, Monday-Saturday, 1000-1600
The Atkinson, Lord Street, Southport, PR8 1DB
Details: https://www.theatkinson.co.uk/exhibition/herbert-ponting/

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12201223462?profile=originalThe second and final phase of the V&A's Photography Centre is now complete and ready for its public unveiling on Thursday, 25 May 2023, At an opening event this evening V&A Director Tristram Hunt and the leading curator Marta Weiss explained the thinking behind the Centre and acknowledged the support of donors and photographers.

Below are a few photographs of the new spaces that compliment and extend the existing galleries. 

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12201221873?profile=originalBirkbeck, University of London, and the British Film Institute are pleased to announce the availability of a fully funded Collaborative doctoral studentship from October 2023 under the AHRC’s Collaborative Doctoral Partnership Scheme.

With privileged access to the BFI’s extensive collections, this project seeks to uncover a story of British filmmaking that foregrounds the shaping influence of migrant skills, techniques, voices and visions in the emergence of a British aesthetic. The aim is to challenge and nuance our understanding of what we mean when we speak of ‘British cinema’. 

This project will be jointly supervised by Dr Agnes Woolley (Birkbeck) and James Bell (BFI) and the student will be expected to spend time at both Birkbeck and the BFI, as well as becoming part of the wider cohort of CDP funded students across the UK. The studentship can be studied either full or part-time. 

12201222269?profile=originalProject Overview 

Dominant narratives about the emergence and development of British film in the twentieth century have largely overlooked the influence of filmmakers from outside Britain. While the 1970s inaugurated an era of reflexive, radical filmmaking by Britain’s diasporic populations, less understood is the transnational sensibility cultivated by migrant filmmakers in the preceding decades and how it continued to underpin the stories Britain told about itself through film, as well as the aesthetic approaches used to tell those stories. While there has been work done into some areas of the subject – for instance into the contributions of German-speaking migrant filmmakers who came to Britain in the 1930s to escape Nazism – there remain large gaps in our understanding of the great impact made to the ongoing development of the British cinema in the post-War years by migrants from Europe, the wider Commonwealth and beyond, as British cinema moved through the 1950s and into the new movements of the 1960s.

The project examines the influence of the ‘outsider’ perspectives of, for example, refugees from post-war Communism in Eastern Europe or British colonial subjects on the story of Britain as presented in its national cinema. With this in mind, this project approaches the BFI’s collections with the intention of drawing out the neglected contributions of migrant filmmakers operating in a variety of roles, such as Director of Photography, Screenwriter or Composer; exploring what influence they have in the overall shaping of the film, and on broader aesthetic and thematic developments in British film. The project might examine the influence of, for example, Polish director Mira Hamermesh, who fled Nazism in 1941; director Robert Vas, who left Hungary following the uprising in 1956; or actor/director Lloyd Reckord, who left Jamaica in 1951. The student will access – and be trained to use – the BFI’s moving image collections (both digitised and physical material), and papers in the archive’s Special Collections holdings. Some of the figures cited above made films funded by the BFI itself, and the student would have unique access to newly-digitised films from that collection, and related paper collections. The work will contribute to a more nuanced understanding of the material in the BFI’s own collections, and to its own history.

Research questions include:

  • What influence did migrant filmmakers have on British film in the post-War period before the emergence of reflexive diasporic filmmaking in the 1970s?
  • In what ways is the notion of a national film culture disrupted by the presence of migrant filmmakers in this period?
  • How have migrants helped shape film culture in Britain through less visible roles such as cinematography, composition and screenwriting?
  • How did key geopolitical events of the era, such as the Cold War and the break-up of Empire impact on the development of British film and moving image?
  • How does an alternative story about ‘British cinema’ help us understand questions of ‘heritage’ and the legacies of colonialism?
  • How did migrant filmmakers in Britain in this period both respond to, and help to shape, wider shifts in British film culture towards an increasingly international ‘arthouse’ cinema culture?

Uncovering the Influence of Migrant Filmmakers on the Emergence and Development of British Film 1940-1970
Start date: 1st October 2023

Closing date for applications: Monday 19th June 2023, 5pm. 
Deadline for references: Friday 23rd June 2023, 12 noon. 
Interview date: w/c 3 July 2023. 
Informal enquiries about this collaborative project can be sent to Agnes Woolley a.woolley@bbk.ac.uk
We will be hosting an online briefing for interested applicants in early June. Please register your interest by emailing a.woolley@bbk.ac.uk   

Full details here

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12201222874?profile=originalThe Firsts rare book fair which takes place at the Saatchi Gallery, London, from 19-21 May 2023 includes a selection of early photography from Stewart & Skeels. Included within their fair offerings is fascicle no. 1 of William Henry Fox Talbot's The Pencil of Nature, 1844. It is offered at £60,000.

Also included is a Julia Margaret Cameron print of Sir John Herschel and other photographs. 

Details here

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12201225290?profile=originalAlan Marshall’s award-winning photography documents a significant period in the 1960s and mid-1970s when both art and design crossed boundaries to explore and portray the expanding world of technology. 

This selected collection of photographs, deeply observed through the lens of an artist, sees beauty in extreme settings and offers an insight into the humanity within powerful industrial processes.

Alan Marshall FRPS FIIP. Industrial Beauty
The School of Philosophy
South Bourne House, 78 Carter Knowle Road, Sheffield, S7 2DX
29 May-9 June 2023
Private view and talk: Saturday 27th and Sunday 28th May at 1430.

Image: Tapping Blast Furnaces - FT Industrial Photographer of the Year 1969

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12201226693?profile=originalBPH has been advised that Insight, the National Science + Media Museum's Collections and Research Centre, which provides physical access to the museum's collections is to close from 5 June 2023 until summer 2024. The museum will still be supporting research access to the collections remotely via virtual research room appointments and its enquiry service. The final in-person appointments which need to be pre-booked are available from 17-19 May 2023. 

The closure is the result of the closure of the museum to facilitate its transofmration through the £6 million Sound and Vision Project.

For more information see: https://www.scienceandmediamuseum.org.uk/researchers/access-to-our-collection

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12201220289?profile=originalThe Photographic Collections Network is holding an online event on the preservation of photographic materials looking at photographic processes and their problems.  This session aims to help participants gain confidence in identifying different types of photographs (predominantly monochrome processes) and recognising internal and external damaging factors which have a detrimental impact on their condition.

 The session is aimed at participants who work with or own collections of photographs. Some participants may have little knowledge of photographs prior to this session but have photographs within their collections. Others may have much deeper experience with photography collections but wish to improve their knowledge and understanding of photographic materials to facilitate long-term preservation.

You will receive a confirmation email when you book, and the event link will be sent to you on the day of the event.

Preservation of Photographic Materials Session: Photographic Processes and their Problems
Tuesday, 16 May 2023, 1-2:45pm BST
Free / donation, online
Register: https://www.photocollections.org.uk/events/preservation-photographic-materials-session-photographic-processes-and-their-problems

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12201218858?profile=originalThe Courtauld has completed a major five-year project to open up its internationally-renowned collection of photographs to the public for free, working with 14,000 volunteers to digitise over one million images from The Conway Library as part of the biggest public inclusion project in The Courtauld’s history. In addition the Courtauld has published its approach to copyright of the material it has digitised. 

Since 2017, almost 2,000 in-person volunteers ranging from ages 18 – 86 have worked closely with The Courtauld to catalogue and photograph every image in The Conway Library collection – the majority of which have never been seen before. Volunteers were recruited from a wide variety of organisations, schools and charities, including The Terrance Higgins Trust, The One Housing Foundation, BeyondAutism, and My Action for Kids. A further 12,000 volunteers participated remotely online.

Located at The Courtauld at Somerset House in London, The Conway Library contains over one million images dating from the inception of photography to the present day: photographs and cuttings of world architecture, sculpture, paintings, and decorative objects, including 160,000 prints by Britain’s leading architectural photographer of the 20th Century Anthony Kersting, documenting his extensive expeditions across the Middle East, rare 19th Century photographs of world architecture, unpublished images revealing bomb damage across Europe following WWII, and T.E. Lawrence’s photographs of Saudi Arabia.

12201219280?profile=originalHighlights include: 

  •  The archive of 160,000 prints of Anthony Kersting – Britain’s leading architectural photographer, the most prolific and widely travelled of his generation. Best known for his photographs of British architecture, he joined the RAF in 1941 stationed in Cairo in a photographic unit. From there he undertook extensive photographic expeditions throughout the Middle East and across the world throughout the 1940s and 50s.
  • The Ministry of Works collection – hundreds of unpublished photographs taken by soldiers, historians, and architects across Europe that reveal cityscapes reduced to rubble by bomb damage during the final days of World War II.
  • T.E. Lawrence’s photographs of Saudi Arabia.
  • The De Laszlo Collection, an archive of 22,000 glass plates including images of works by major early 20th Century British artists.
  • Images of Istanbul from the 1850s by pioneering 19th Century photographer James Robertson.
  • Important photographs documenting the history of social housing in Britain, including Highpoint Flats by Tecton Group, London, and the Brutalist Park Hill Flats, Sheffield.

The digitisation project, supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, has become the largest and most diverse public inclusion project in The Courtauld’s history, introducing new audiences and uncovering new insights into this remarkable collection. The entire collection is now available as high-resolution images, making the library easier to use as a tool for research and education and enabling a wider audience to access it.

See more here: https://courtauld.ac.uk/news-blogs/2023/conway-library-photographic-collection-unveiled/

Read the Courtauld's approach to copyright here: https://photocollections.courtauld.ac.uk/copyright

Image: top: William J R Curtis, Dubarry Court, Brighton, East Sussex; lower: Norfolk Crescent, Bath. 

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12201233282?profile=originalAs part of the run up to the UK's National Gallery's bicentenary celebrations in 2024 it is running a series of blogs and other activities in its 199th year. As part of that it has published a blog titled 100 years of the Photographic Department: Part One which looks at how the department has operated and evolved over the past one hundred years. 

Read it here:  https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/behind-the-scenes/100-years-of-the-photographic-department-part-one

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As part of the  AHRC funded research project Communities and Crowds – we are holding an online workshop on the 20 July, which looks at a new approach to volunteer led digitation which leads to volunteer created citizen science platforms. We’ll be sharing what we have done to date – and welcoming input from volunteers, scholars, museum professionals and other cultural heritage institutions that are interested in applying this approach to their own work and/or collections

If you are interested in attending, please email: p.carr@nms.ac.uk by the 30 June 2023. 

Details of the project are here: https://www.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/project/communities-and-crowds/

Further details of the workshop are below:

Hybrid Volunteering: A New Approach to Photographic Collections

Date: Thursday, July 20th

Location: Online

Summary: Volunteering with heritage collections is often separated between in person opportunities to work with GLAM institutions, or as massive online participation activities - such as platforms for crowdsourced research. This hybrid conference will bring together heritage professionals, volunteers, and digital humanities scholars to explore how we can combine in person and online volunteering with GLAM collections to make for a richer and more engaged volunteering opportunity. The workshop will share initial results from the AHRC funded Communities and Crowds research project, which has created a new volunteer-led digitization to participatory research process for photographic collections. It will also invite GLAM professionals, in-person and remote volunteers to help us explore the next steps for expanding this approach to other collections and projects.

Programme

9:30-9:45 - Communities and Crowds: An overview and Introduction (Geoff Belknap, Keeper of Science and Technology, National Museums Scotland)

9:45-10:30 - A New Volunteer led Digitization approach (Alex Fitzpatrick, Research Associate, National Science and Media Museum)

10:30-10:45 - Break

10:45-11:30 - Digital Volunteering and New Talk Infrastructure (Sam Blickhan, Humanities Lead for Zooniverse and Co-Director of the Zooniverse team at Chicago's Adler Planetarium)

11:30-12:00 - Group trial of How did we get here (Volunteer Created Zooniverse Project - National Science and Media Museum)

12:00-:1:30 - Lunch

1:30-2:00 - Exploring Histories of Community in the Archives: Perspectives from Project Volunteers (Sandra Rowe, Maureen Rowe, Lincoln Anderson, Rebecca Smith)

2:00-2:30 - Unlocking the Potential of Virtual Volunteering (Matt Hicks, Head of Volunteering, Science Museum Group)

2:30-3:00 - Building an easy-to-use App and designing efficient data workflows tailored for volunteering collections projects (Lawrence Brooks, Collections and Data Manager, Science Museum Group)

 

3:00-3:30 - Break

 

3:30-4:30 - Workshop Open Discussion - Photographic Collections Network Facilitated

Applying this approach to your photographic collection?

What should a Holistic Hybrid Volunteering Toolkit look like/include?

4:30-5:00 - Discussion and Next Steps

Dr Geoff Belknap (he/him)

Keeper of Science and Technology

National Museums Scotland

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Ben Dunham writes... The photographer was Thomas Bell, born 1870 in Northumberland. In 1910, he married Ann Mary Lucas, the daughter of landscape painter George Lucas. His brother-in-law was J. Alphege Brewer, who made his fame with very large, color etchings of cathedrals and other historical buildings damaged or threatened during WWI (see my website at www.jalphegebrewer.info (http://www.jalphegebrewer.info)). It is difficult to explain the perspective and level of detail in Brewer's etchings without including the possibility of the use of photographic projections. 

From comparing the etchings to surviving postcards and other views from before the war, it seems as if Brewer might have had his own source of photographic images especially taken for this purpose. I'm wondering if Thomas Bell might have collaborated with Brewer in this project.

Does anyone know more about Bell and his studio, and whether any of his photographs of historical buildings (if any) survive? 

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12201232694?profile=originalJust published is the annual Burlington Magazine photography special issue timed to coincide with next week's Photo London fair. It is available in printed form (£25) or as a PDF download (£20).

The published papers and articles include The Bayeux Tapestry photographed (Ella Ravilious); ‘Goethe’s house is severely wrecked’: Lee Miller at Buchenwald and Weimar(Katharina Günther), One short trip to New York: Bill Jay and Tony Ray-Jones (Grant Scott), Landscape as grid in Stephen Shore’s American surfaces’ (Tom Cornelius), Soft, feminine and forgotten: Kate Smith’s autochromes (Catlin Langford), Rrose Sélavy as house painter (Francis M. Naumann), an article review of The Photography Centre at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (Lisa Stein) and editorial on the digitisation of the Conway and Witt Libraries. 

The Burlington Magazine, May 2023, #1442 – Vol 165 
Details: https://www.burlington.org.uk/current-issue

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12201225093?profile=originalMarcus Adams' travelling studio camera is to be offered at auction on 4 May. The camera was designed and custom-built for Adams to make half-plate negatives, and is with a  Carl Zeiss Jena, Tessar 25cm f/4.5 lens no. 451181 and a Dallmeyer pneumatic shutter. It was originally from the estate of Adams' widow. The camera is estimated at £400-600. 

Adams was a Fellow of both the Royal Photographic Society and Institute of British Photographers and a specialist in child studies, as well as a photographer of royalty. 

The camera is shown in pictures of Adams' studio now held in the National Portrait Gallery collection: 

https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw280916/Photomontage-of-Marcus-Adams-with-his-travelling-camera

https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw280914/Marcus-Adams-with-his-travelling-camera-designed-and-built-by-himself

 

12201225675?profile=originalAuction: Happy & Glorious: God Save The King
4 May 2023
Chiswick Auctions, London, lot 54
See: https://www.chiswickauctions.co.uk/auction/lot/lot-54---marcus-adams-1875-1959--travelling-half-plate-camera/?lot=218910&so=0&st=camera&sto=0&au=922&ef=&et=&ic=False&sd=0&pp=48&pn=1&g=1

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12201228670?profile=originalA series of photographs by Lewis Carroll vastly exceeded their estimates at auction recently. In a timed auction running from 13-23 April 2023 held by Sworders eight single images by Carroll sold for prices from £9,450 to £16,550, against estimates starting from £800-1000. Each showed  Alexandra 'Xie' Kitchin, a favourite Carroll subject. The highest price was achieved by a photograph of Alexandra 'Xie' Kitchin as a Chinaman, taken on 14th July 1873.

See: https://timed.sworder.co.uk/past-auctions/sworde1-10041?term=Carroll

The eight images are shown below: 

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V&A Photography Centre - update

12201224861?profile=originalIan Mansfield has published two visuals from V&A planning documents showing the new V&A Photography Centre space which opens to the public on 25 May. The Art Newspaper also carries renderings of the new space.  Separately the Royal Photographic Society's Journal (May-June 2023) carries interviews with key people connected with the new galleries. 

See Mansfield's blog here: https://www.ianvisits.co.uk/articles/va-museum-doubling-the-size-of-its-photography-galleries-59745/

The Art Newspaper piece can be seen here.

The RPS Journal is available to RPS members only 

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12201223052?profile=originalThe National Stereoscopic Association is pleased to announce its fourth annual "Sessions on the History of Stereoscopic Photography" at the 49th 3D-Con in Buffalo, New York. Presentations are welcome on any aspect of stereo-media from the inception of stereoscopic photography to immersive stereo media. We project stereoscopically on the 3D-Con's big screen, and our growing community of international scholars represent diverse research from the nineteenth to the twenty-first century. All stereoscopic photography subjects from the historical to the contemporary are invited.

Please send an abstract of 500-600 words and a biography of 250-300 words and contact information by May 15, 2023.
Notification of acceptance by May 29, 2023.  Digital images will be expected by July 5, 2023.

Call for Papers extended deadline

Sessions on the History of Stereoscopic Photography IV
August 4, 2023
The National Stereoscopic Association’s 3D-Con
The Hyatt Regency Buffalo Hotel, Buffalo, New York
July 31-August 7, 2023

https://3d-con.com/history.php

 

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12201227861?profile=originalJames Hyman Gallery is pleased to present an online exhibition of early works by Nigel Henderson (1917-1985) that depict street parties in East London at the time of the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953.

Photographed near the Henderson's home in Chisenhale Road in Bethnal Green these rare photographs - most of which have never been exhibited before - focus on childhood celebrations and combine casual photographs with amazing group portraits. 

Known for his documentary and experimental photography and imaginative use of collage, Henderson was a founding member of the Independent Group in 1952, with which he regularly exhibited, notably in This Is Tomorrow at the Whitechapel Art Gallery (1956).

Details: https://www.jameshymangallery.com/exhibitions/192-coronation-street-parties-1953-vintage-photographs-by-nigel-henderson/overview/

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Royal Society online resources

12201227464?profile=originalThe Royal Society has made available around 250,000 documents online, covering everything from climate observations, the history of colour, how to conduct electricity, and animals. Of particualar note to BPH readers is correspondence and images sent by William Henry Fox Talbot, Herschel, Claudet and others

You can access the online archive here. We have picked out some of the highlights:

Image: Unpublished paper, 'An account of some recent improvements in photography' by Henry Fox Talbot / ref number: AP/25/13 / date: 1841

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12201219058?profile=originalA rare Kodak advertising sign based on the design of the artist and illustrator Fred Pegram is being sold today at Chippenham Auctions. It is 23 x 33 inches and is estimated at £1000-1500. 

Details; https://www.the-saleroom.com/en-gb/auction-catalogues/chippenham-auction-rooms/catalogue-id-srchi10122/lot-465a8d62-6f2a-4d9e-97fe-afe90155ea4c

UPDATE: the lot sold for £600 + BP

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