Michael Pritchard's Posts (3137)

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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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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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12201171292?profile=originalThe V&A is the world’s leading museum of art, design and performance, housing a collection of over 2.3 million objects that document 5,000 years of human creativity from across six continents. The Museum holds many of UK’s designated National Collections, including sculpture, ceramics, metalwork, textiles and furniture, including extensive collections of prints, drawings, posters, photographs and portrait miniatures. It is also home to the National Art Library, which holds the UK’s most comprehensive public reference library for the fine and decorative arts, as well as special collections on the art of the book ranging from the Middle Ages to the present day.  The Archive of Art and Design holds extensive archives of over 1,000 individuals, associations and companies involved in the art and design process. The two photography galleries display a broad range of contemporary and historic photographs with a further four galleries and library, housing the Royal Photographic Society collection, currently being developed.

As Conservator (Photographs) you will provide excellence in the conservation of photographic collections (including prints, negatives, glass plates negatives and digital photographs). The postholder will have suitable experience in the treatment of photographic material both historical and contemporary and the ability to undertake technical examination and scientific analysis. An excellent knowledge and understanding of the properties of materials used in their construction and conservation is essential. The postholder is expected to be familiar with mounting and re-housing techniques and willing to train in the use of digital cutting systems.

The postholder, through a combination of examination, assessment, documentation, interventive and preventive measures, will support the delivery of the museum’s Public Programme, strategic objectives, and the Conservation and Care of Collections workplan. The postholder will work closely with the Conservation Operations team, the Preventive Conservation team, the Conservation Science Team, and other stakeholders such as Technical Services, Curators and external borrowers.

The postholder will also have a proven ability to work independently, project manage and organise tasks to work in an effective and efficient way and to produce a high standard of work within tight deadlines.

Fixed term contract until 31 March 2024

Details here

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12201226283?profile=originalPaul Sng's film Tish, an intimate portrait of British documentary photographer Tish Murtha, will open the 30th edition of Sheffield DocFest on 14 June 2023.

In Tish, Paul Sng celebrates the vision and profound humanism of this gifted artist. As the film questions the value placed on art and artists from working class roots, we follow Tish's daughter Ella, as she fights to preserve her mother's legacy. No less striking than the work of its subject, Tish is a powerful tribute to a vital artist, activist and social chronicler, and a rallying call to all whose engagement with art questions who gets seen and heard, who doesn't, and why. This is a story of contemporary Britain, of the fight for culture, as well as the life of a mother and activist. 

Directed by Paul Sng and produced by Jen Corcoran through Teesside-based Freya Films in association with Hopscotch Films and Sng's Velvet Joy Productions, with cinematography by Hollie Galloway. The voice of Tish is played by Maxine Peake. The film was made with the support of the BFI Doc Society Fund (thanks to National Lottery funding) and Screen Scotland, in association with the BBC.

Paul Sng, Director of Tish, says: “We’re completely delighted that Tish has been chosen to open Sheffield DocFest, a huge honour in a fitting city to launch a film about a photographer whose images show the fun, mischief and ingenuity of working class communities. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Tish Murtha used her camera to interrogate the detrimental impact of Thatcherism and deindustrialisation. More than forty years later, her images retain an urgency and empathy that speak to the concerns faced by people struggling to pay for food and energy bills in the present day. While this film celebrates the calibre of Tish’s work, it also asks questions about the value placed on working class artists and the communities that nurture them. These are important questions, now more than ever.” 

Annabel Grundy, Sheffield DocFest Managing Director, says: We are delighted to open the festival with Tish, as we celebrate 30 years of Sheffield DocFest. Tish shines a light on a working class artist whose work was tragically overlooked while she was alive, and whose story was rooted in the North. We are thrilled to welcome back director Paul Sng to DocFest, who presented the film at early-development stage in our marketplace in 2021 and producer Jen Corcoran who came through our own 'Future Producers' school seven years ago.”

Details; https://sheffdocfest.com/news/announcing-2023-opening-night-film-guest-honour-and-one-our-headline-talks

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12201224090?profile=originalSparked by a set of 19th century glass plate negatives, this talk will discuss the first photographic campaign to record the Bayeux Tapestry, which brought it to prominence as an iconic artwork in the British imagination. Photographing the Tapestry was an innovative process undertaken for the South Kensington Museum (now the V&A) in 1872. Special techniques and equipment including solar enlargement, photocollage and hand-painting were combined to make a 214 foot long coloured photograph representing the Tapestry at life size scale. This object played a vital role in understanding the Tapestry in Britain for decades afterwards and generated further copies in other media including the 1886 embroidered copy of the tapestry made by the Leek Embroidery Society, now in Reading Museum.

This talk will place the first photography campaign of the Tapestry within current research into institutional photographic practices, cultural diplomacy through photography, and photographic replication of artworks.

Ella Ravilious's talk draws on research that will be published by The Burlington Magazine in its forthcoming May issue, which is devoted to Photography. 

Hosted by Photo London
Photographing the Bayeux Tapestry
24 April 2023 at 1800 (BST)
Register and: SIGN UP

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12201223288?profile=originalThe collections of 19th century stereo photographs (stereoviews) and historical maps on which this exhibition is based, had their origins over the past two decades in teaching and research on the historical geography of industrial development in what became known as the American Manufacturing Belt. 

Through the lens of the stereo photographer, exploring the novel technology of 3D visual effects, the exhibition examines key industrial sectors, such as the railroads, oil production, coal mining and the rise of the iron and steel industry. The varied geographical manifestations of the technologies and developments involved are further examined using a variety of cartographic resources.

This is the first time that images from a large collection of US industrial stereoviews of this kind have been exhibited in the UK, if not in Europe. While some will be familiar to 19th century photographic historians, others are very rare or are newly discovered and are not found in even the largest US public collections. Likewise, scans of original maps, dating back as far as a railroad map from 1831, are used to illustrate the wider geographical contexts of economic development, as well as pinpointing the locations at which photographs were taken. 

Where the original images will support it, large format anaglyphs have been created of selected scenes, to allow photos to be studied in 3D and in much greater detail than is possible using small format stereoviewers alone. It will become apparent that stereoviews represent an immensely valuable, but strangely neglected resource for the study of historical geography, quite apart from their important place in the history of photography.

The exhibition is designed and curated by Professor Richard Healey of the School of the Environment, Geography and Geosciences at the University of Portsmouth. The support of the School in creating the displays is gratefully acknowledged, together with the contribution of a number of technical specialists in scanning and digital reproduction from across the university.

The exhibition runs from Monday 17 April to Friday 19 May. Opening hours are Monday to Friday 10.00am - 5.00pm with two additional opening dates on Monday 8 May (bank holiday), and Saturday 20 May.

Seeing Double: Stereo Photography, Historical Cartography and the US Industrial Revolution 1840-1920
7 April 2023 - 19 May 2023
Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), 1 Kensington Gore, London, SW7 2AR
Details: https://www.rgs.org/events/summer-2023/seeing-double/

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12201220486?profile=originalThe Getty Research Institute (GRI) has acquired a major collection of Indian and South Asian photographs from Ken and Jenny Jacobson. Numbering approximately 4,625 images from the 19th and early-20th centuries, the collection documents the people, social customs, religious practices, architecture, and landscape of the subcontinent during the princely state era under the British Raj, which ended with Indian independence in 1947.

Created during the European domination of the subcontinent and often through a colonial lens, this remarkable group of photographs contains copious research material that will support the study of South Asian culture and enable critical examination of this complex historical period,” says Mary Miller, director of the GRI. “The Jacobson collection stands as a unique and foremost resource for research and teaching that is further heightened when combined with the Getty Research Institute’s holdings.”

As dealers and knowledgeable collectors, the Jacobsons assembled this unique collection over five decades from 285 sources. It mirrors the history of the medium as practiced on the subcontinent with a full range of processes from daguerreotype to photochrome.

The collection will be cataloged over the course of a number of years and made available to researchers at the GRI.

See: https://www.getty.edu/news/getty-research-institute-acquires-major-collection-of-indian-and-south-asian-photographs/

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12201226667?profile=originalThe 1850s were a transitional decade for photography and a space where wealthy amateurs often shaped and informed its direction. Experimenting within its technical constraints, Frances Edmund Currey, land agent for the 6th Duke of Devonshire’s Irish properties, constructed a multi-layered chronicle of life in and around Lismore Castle.

His work encompasses personal memoir, social history, documentary record and artistic ambition. Focussing on photographic albums held by the Chatsworth Trust, curator Sarah McDonald evaluates Currey’s differing relationships to the medium and his rising significance as one of Ireland’s pioneering photographers.

Francis Currey (1814-1896) was one of the earliest photographers in Ireland and was a member of the Photographic Society of London from 1853 until his death. He was employed as the agent for the Duke of Devonshire at Lismore Castle.

Opening Reception, Saturday 20 May, 3pm

Followed by a walk to see the This Rural at The Mill at 4pm (https://lismorecastlearts.ie/whats-on/this-rural)

Lismore Castle Arts
Lismore
Ireland 

See: https://lismorecastlearts.ie/whats-on/ways-of-seeing

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12201227271?profile=originalFor over 100 years, when you’d often have to wait a week to see your photos, film processors used photo wallets - cheery illustrated envelopes - to return your pictures to you. They showed what subjects were considered suitable for a snapshot: bright-eyed children, laughing couples, adorable pets and perfect landscapes; they also reinforced prohibitions by what they omitted.

Drawing from the author’s personal collection of photo wallets from the 1900s to the 1990s, Annebella Pollen's book charts a century of popular photography in Britain: the birth of a new mass leisure pastime mainly marketed towards women, the growth of camera ownership after the Second World War, and behind it all, the working conditions of the people processing the films. It commemorates a time when you never knew if you had captured a treasured memory or your finger in front of the lens.

More Than A Snapshot: A Visual History of Photo Wallets
Annebella Pollen
Four Corners Irregulars #10
£12, hardback, 112 pages, 22 × 16 cm
Published: 11 May 2023
ISBN 978-1-909829-22-0
Pre-order: https://www.fourcornersbooks.co.uk/books/more-than-a-snapshot

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12201226483?profile=originalNewcastle’s Side Gallery is to close on 9 April 2023 as a consequence of the loss of it’s Arts Council England (ACE)  National Portfolio Organisation (NPO) status last November. This had provided the gallery with £120,000 annually for the previous four years. The gallery received £70,880 in ACE transition funding to help it move from public funding to other sources. The gallery blamed ‘critical funding cuts and the cost of living crisis’ for the closure.

This week the Gallery launched a public crowdfunder with a target of £60,000 to support re-opening in September 2024, although it says ‘our future is uncertain, and we now face the possibility of permanent closure’. It has lost six staff members and curator Kerry Lowes is coming up with a survival plan. 

There is a sense of déjà vu with the current situation and loss of NPO status and its associated funding. Back in 2011 Side Gallery also lost its NPO status and a petition was then launched then to save it. An Early Day Motion (EDM) was tabled in Parliament on 11 May of that year calling on the Arts Council to review its decision.

Side Gallery re-opened in 2016 after a two year refurbishment funded with £1.12 million for the National Heritage Memorial Fund and £90,000 from the Arts Council. It re-gained its NPO status in 2018. 

The gallery is run by Amber Film & Photography Collective CIC with the significant Amberside collection of photography held Amberside Trust. The Amber film and photography collective, which came together in 1968 to capture working-class life in the North East, opened the gallery in 1977. The Amberside Collection was reported in 2022 to comprise some 20,000 photographs, 10,000 slides and 100 films. These, together with their associated paper files take up 36.19 cubic metres and there are currently approximately 6 TB of digital assets.

Details of the crowdfunder are here: https://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/p/saveside

By 1000 on Sunday, 9 April the crowdfunder had raised £38,748 of £60,000, by 2132 on Sunday, 9 April is stood at £40,921. 

The total required has been increased to £75,000. The call has reached £63,486 at 1334 Sunday, 23 April. 

Image: Side Gallery

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