Michael Pritchard's Posts (3009)

Sort by

12201186887?profile=originalMore than thirty people gathered in Edinburgh on 29 September to celebrate the installation of a commemorative plaque to John Thomson (1837-1921) on the exterior of his childhood home at 6 Brighton Street. The building in Thomson's day housed 77 people and is now immediately behind the National Museums Scotland in Chambers Street and close to the University of Edinburgh. 

12201187480?profile=originalThe centenary of Thomson's death in 1921 was the catalyst for the plaque and follows the restoration of Thomson's grave in 2019. Betty Yao MBE and Jamie Carstairs, Deborah Ireland and others, lobbied Historical Environment Scotland, the Scottish government body which manages the plaque scheme. Representatives from the Scottish Society for the History of Photography, HES, the Royal Photographic Society, curators and photo-historians were all represented,  Thomson is best known for his publications of his travels in Asia and Street Life in London  and for the work he undertook for the Royal Geographic Society in training explorers in photography. He was also a member of the Royal Photographic Society,

An exhibition of 94 of Thomson's photographs, curated by Betty Yao, is also on show at Heriot Watt University. This is the first showing of Through the lens of John Thomson in Edinburgh, Thomson is an alumni of one of the university's predecessor bodies. 

Separately, publisher MuseumsEtc has released a  936-page, two-volume set, comprising John Thomson's Street Life in London and an accompanying volume with context and commentary by Emily Kathryn Morgan. See: https://www.museumsetc.com/products/street-life-in-london-two-volume-set

For the exhibition see: https://www.hw.ac.uk/uk/services/is/heritage/china-through-the-lens-of-john-thomson.htm

12201188074?profile=original

Photographs: © Michael Pritchard

Read more…

12201179256?profile=originalThe Royal Collection Trust's Prince Albert project has come to an end and is now fully live and accessible. Prince Albert: His Life and Legacy makes freely available a total of 22,000 archival documents, prints and photographs from the Royal Archives, the Royal Collection and the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851. 

The latest additions include Albert and Victoria’s collection of almost 1000 negatives. Prince Albert and Queen Victoria regularly commissioned photographers to record royal household staff at royal residences. The resulting glass plate negatives  depict individuals ranging from equerries and ladies-in-waiting to ghillies and keepers of the Royal Kennels. Among the sitters are Dr Ernst BeckerCarl Ruland and Baron Stockmar who were particularly significant to Prince Albert.

The negatives shown includes work from Bambridge, Fenton, Caldesi and other well-known royal photographers as well as members of the royal family themselves. 

The unique visual record these negatives assemble indicates the high regard the queen and the prince held for their employees, regardless of rank, and provides information on the people the royal couple surrounded themselves with at home.

See: https://albert.rct.uk/glass-plate-negatives/royal-household-portraits

With thanks to Helen Trompeteler for highlighting this.

Image: Dr Ernst Becker (1826-88), Lucy Kerr (1822-74) 26 - 26 Jul 1854. RCIN 2083108

Read more…

12201179458?profile=originalRyerson Image Centre is hosting a noon time collection talk with Steven Evans who will discuss the Francis Bedford Research Collection. Steven Evans is a Toronto-based photographer and collector who has focused on architecture and the urban environment for over 40 years. Evans graduated from Ryerson University’s Media Studies program in 1982 and as a collector in the years since, Evans has compiled, over two decades, a comprehensive resource of early photographs and other objects associated with the British photographer Francis Bedford.

The collection surveys Bedford’s impressive achievement as a leading maker of architectural and landscape images during the late 19th century. This talk is an opportunity for the public to learn about the Francis Bedford Research Collection, of nearly 1300 objects, which features the photographer’s early work with illustration and lithography, and examples of his amateur and commercial photography.

The Francis Bedford Research Collection
30 September 2021
12:00 PM in Eastern Time (US and Canada) | 1700 (BST) | 1800 (CET)

Free, book here: https://ryerson.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_VxzPpxY-T76yhdQr2t_d2Q

Read more…

12201185889?profile=originalGrant Scott, who has done so much with his film Do not bend: The photographic Life of Bill Jay to remind us of the seminal role played by Jay in British photography from the late 1960s to mid-1970s, has made a new discovery. He has located Jay's contact sheets from a trip he made with Tony Ray-Jones to New York in 1968 hidden in a plastic box in a house in Tempe, Arizona. 

Scott sets out the background to the trip and illustrates them. One hopes that there is more to come.  

Scott blogs about them here; https://unitednationsofphotography.com/2021/09/16/seven-days-in-new-york-tony-ray-jones-bill-jay-a-host-of-characters-and-the-future-of-british-photography/

His film about Jay is available free to view on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wd47549knOU&t=60s

Image: Bill Jay, New York, 1968 / United Nations of Photography

Read more…

Obituary: Peter Bunnell (1937-2021)

12201178298?profile=originalPeter C. Bunnell, whose passionate and inspired teaching profoundly changed the field of photographic history, passed away at his home in Princeton, New Jersey, on Monday, 20 September 2021. As the inaugural David Hunter McAlpin Professor of the History of Photography and Modern Art at Princeton University, a position he accepted in 1972 and held for 30 years before his retirement, Bunnell educated a generation of undergraduate and graduate students in what is still a young branch of art history; his was the first endowed professorship in the history of photography at any American university.

An enthralling storyteller with a deep personal knowledge of the medium’s history, an infectious enthusiasm, and an unfailing devotion to his students, Bunnell drew capacity crowds to his undergraduate courses and attracted graduate students from across the country and beyond. A testament to the widespread and lasting influence of his teaching, Bunnell’s Princeton protégés have served as curators and professors at leading institutions including the Metropolitan Museum; the Museum of Modern Art; The Morgan Library; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; George Eastman Museum; the Philadelphia Museum of Art; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; the International Center of Photography; the Victoria and Albert Museum; the Fotostiftung Schweiz; Aperture; Brown University; Indiana University; City College of New York; Bard College; Bowling Green State University; and Zurich University of the Arts, among others.

As curator of photography at the Princeton University Art Museum throughout his 30-year tenure on the faculty, and as Museum Director from 1973 to 1978 and Acting Director again from 1998 to 2000, Bunnell built a broad-ranging collection of photography, the first-hand examination of which became an unforgettable central element of the student experience in his classes and seminars. “These photographs are used,” he said, “they don't just sit around in boxes.” In fact, he taught all of the discussion sections of his courses himself, always with original photographs rather than with slides. Photographer and former Princeton professor Emmet Gowin recalls Bunnell’s extraordinary gift for “awakening and reaching the hearts and minds of students of all kinds, but especially his ability to connect with and support students attempting to practice the art of photography themselves.” At the time of Bunnell’s retirement in 2002, Gowin praised his capacity to understand the work of artists “who were in no way synchronous with his own stances or world views. To a degree almost unthinkable, the collection he built at Princeton is without gender bias or cultural bias, but embracing of all that was fresh and difficult in the work of young contemporary artists.

Allen Rosenbaum, who Bunnell hired as Assistant Director of the Museum in 1974 and who succeeded him as Director, similarly recalls his generosity, noting that “there was no ego or vanity in his directorship.” Rosenbaum vividly recalls having been invited to a class led by Bunnell and Gowin and having come away with “a sense of the great gifts of these men as thinkers and communicators, and with the revelation—at least for me—that there was such a thing as connoisseurship in photography.”

In addition to the expansive and carefully selected collection that Bunnell built for the Museum, spanning the history of the medium, he secured two important archives—those of Pictorialist photographer Clarence H. White, the subject of his Master’s thesis at Ohio University, and Minor White, Bunnell’s own mentor as a photographer and interpreter of the medium. He met Minor White as an undergraduate at the Rochester Institute of Technology, where classes taught by White nurtured his burgeoning interest in photography. “I took his classes, and, as was his practice, he drew a group of students around him outside the Institute,” recalled Bunnell. “These were informal sessions where he explored in more depth his philosophy and attitudes toward photographing.” Bunnell went on to receive a Master of Fine Arts in photography from Ohio University in 1961 under the tutelage of Clarence H. White Jr., as well as an M.A. in art history from Yale University in 1965, where he began a doctoral dissertation on the life and work of Alfred Stieglitz.

Immediately before joining the Princeton faculty in 1972, Peter Bunnell served as curator of photography at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, where he had joined the staff in 1960 as a collection cataloguer and risen to associate curator in 1968 and curator in 1970. At MoMA, Bunnell’s achievements included ground-breaking exhibitions that offered innovative new avenues to analyze and understand photography: Photography as Printmaking (1968), and Photography into Sculpture (1970), as well as an exhibition of the work of Clarence H. White (1971). In addition to exhibitions at Princeton in subsequent years, including a continuous series of installations designed for students in his courses, Bunnell organized the Harry Callahan exhibition for the United States Pavilion at the 38th Venice Biennale in 1978.

Beyond his role as teacher and curator, Bunnell served the field in various capacities—as national chair of the Society for Photographic Education and chair of the board of The Friends of Photography—and was the recipient of numerous honors and awards including fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation (1979) and the Asian Cultural Council (1984). He was also named an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Photographic Society.

Peter Bunnell wrote extensively on topics across the history of photography, though primarily about American artists, and most often about living photographers, many of whom he knew personally. His numerous essays have been anthologized in Degrees of Guidance: Essays on Twentieth-Century American Photography (1993) and Inside the Photograph: Writings on Twentieth-Century Photography (2006). His book Minor White: The Eye That Shapes, which accompanied a retrospective exhibition of White’s photographs that opened at the Museum of Modern Art in 1989, won the George Wittenborn Memorial Award of the Art Libraries Society of North America. He also authored three monographs on Jerry N. Uelsmann, his undergraduate roommate at Rochester Institute of Technology and a lifelong friend. In addition, he edited several anthologies—A Photographic Vision: Pictorial Photography, 1889–1923 (1980); Edward Weston on Photography (1983); and Aperture Magazine Anthology: The Minor White Years, 1952–1976 (2012); and co-edited two Arno Press reprint series, The Literature of Photography and The Sources of Modern Photography.

Long into retirement, Bunnell happily remained an invaluable source for researchers in the history of photography who called upon his recollections of firsthand encounters with twentieth-century photographers, recollections aided by file cabinets filled with decades of carefully taken notes, newspaper clippings, and other seldom-saved ephemera—an invaluable resource that will become available to future scholars at Princeton’s Art Museum and Firestone Library.

Peter Curtis Bunnell was born in 1937 in Poughkeepsie, New York, the son of Harold C. Bunnell and Ruth L. Buckhout. He is not survived by immediate family but is held dear in the memory of the many students, scholars, artists, and curators who benefited immensely from his wisdom and deep generosity of spirit. Following his wishes, no funeral service will be held, but friends, colleagues, and protégés will gather at a later date to celebrate his life.

Malcolm Daniel, Gus and Lyndall Wortham Curator of Photography, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

Picture: Princeton University

Another obituary is available here: https://planetprinceton.com/2021/09/21/photography-scholar-and-former-princeton-university-art-museum-director-peter-bunnell-dies-at-83/

Read more…

12201177463?profile=originalPhotographic Digital Heritage: Institutions, Communities and The Political intends to explore how uses of digital technology, and digitisation in particular, have transformed the ways in which historical photographs of value to perceived inherited cultural legacies are collected, deployed and identified as such. It will specifically investigate what has led formal heritage and memory institutions to drive this process, how heritage communities might have navigated their aspirations around it, and how political interest groups have taken advantage of it to promote their causes.

Photographic Digital Heritage: Institutions, Communities and The Political
Online:19-20 October 2021
Registration is free
See: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/photographic-digital-heritage-institutions-communities-and-the-political-registration-172665576387

Read more…

12201177497?profile=originalForum Auctions, London, is offering a copy of John Thomson's Illustrations of China and its People which dates from 1873-74. The volumes include 96 photographic plates. The lot is estimated at £15,000-20,000. 

12201177701?profile=originalIf you're interested check out the lot here

UPDATED: The lot sold for £16,000 plus buyer's premium. 

This year marks the centenary of Thomson's death and later this week a plaque will be unveiled at his childhood in Edinburgh. Thomson was an alumnus of Heriot Watt's predecessor body and an exhibition of his photography opens at Heriot-Watt's Riccarton campus until 22 March 2022.

See:https://www.hw.ac.uk/uk/services/is/heritage/china-through-the-lens-of-john-thomson.htm

Read more…

12201177258?profile=originalColour Fever is a two-week celebration of colour photography. Through a series of online talks and ‘in conversations’, it will consider a range of processes, exhibitions, inventors and artists, spanning the nineteenth century to the present day. Hear from photographers, artists, academics, curators and researchers working with colour photography, historically and today.

The programme includes conversations with Susan Meiselas, James Barnor, and Anton Custers; and some 25 separate papers across multiple sessions that range broadly across colour, its photographers and applications. The full programme can be seen at the link below. 

Colour Fever
Monday, 25 October 2021 – Friday, 5 November 2021
Free, online via Zoom
Details and booking https://www.vam.ac.uk/event/xeWKGkej/colour-fever-conference-2021


The event has been organised by Catlin Langford from the V&A Museum. It is Supported by The Bern Schwartz Family Foundation and hosted in association with the V&A Research Institute.

Read more…

12201170674?profile=originalThe study of women photographers continues to attract new research and the V&A's Parasol and new curatorial post is the latest example from the UK (see BPH last week). Different ways of looking at existing data are also providing new insights. This piece by Kim Biel for Lapham's Quarterly looks at new work by Library of Congress conservator, Adrienne Lundgren, which shows the strength of women in the American MidWest.. 

Read the full report here: https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/roundtable/midwestern-exposure/?ca_key_code=FB9LQA3

Read more…

12201169484?profile=originalThis four-week course looks at the role of photography archives in relation to their social, historical and cultural uses. Citing collections within both UK and internationally, each session will look at different aspects of photography archives – from how they are formed, sourced and shaped to examples of how they have been employed, interpreted and made public. 

Led by artist and academic Ravi Deepres, each week will consist of themed presentations and talks, guest speakers, debates and discussion.

This course will be of interest to artists and others with an interest in learning more about some of the more hidden archives with photography collections.

Recontextualising the Archive
20 Sep 2021-11 Oct 2021, 1830-2000 (BST)
£140, £120 concession

Online

Read more here: https://thephotographersgallery.org.uk/whats-on/course-recontextualising-archive

Read more…

Publication: The Lindsays of Balcarres

12201177072?profile=originalThe Lindsays of Balcarres began with the rediscovery of some dusty photograph albums at the home of the author’s late father in Fife. The wealth of images within, unexplored for over eighty years, provided the perfect way to present the fascinating untold stories of the family and their lives. From a photography perspective it starts with daguerreotypes, through to collodion and more recent silver-gelatine prints. 

The family, which traces its roots back to the time of Charlemagne, almost lost everything after siding with the Stuarts, but fortunate marriages, colonial endeavours and industry enabled them to create a new fortune and reclaim their position as the Premier Earls of Scotland. This renewal coincided with the birth of photography in the 1840s, which encouraged the family to capture moments of their leisure pursuits and the part they played in the events of their time. The collection serves as a social history, recording the rapidly changing industries they were involved in and the relationships with their staff on which their way of life depended.  Some of the earliest daguerreotypes in the family archive point to the enduring affinity that would develop between photography and the country house. It is the perfect medium for a family so deeply involved in both fine art and the latest technology.

12201176656?profile=originalThe reader will encounter a gallery of colourful characters, including Elizabeth Lindsay, who married the 3rd Earl of Hardwicke in 1782 and became Vicereine of Ireland; her great-nephew, Robert, who joined the Guards at the outbreak of the Crimean War and carried the Queen’s Colours to the heights of Alma, earning him the first of two citations for the Victoria Cross; and his brother-in- law, Alexander, the 25th Earl of Crawford and his polymath son Ludovic (shown on the front of this book), who together rebuilt the family library, Bibliotheca Lindesiana, into one of the world’s finest.

James Ludovic, known intimately as ‘Udo’ as a young man and latterly Ludovic, was surely one of the family’s most intriguing figures of the last two centuries, both in his pursuits and appearance. Amongst his many achievements, he saved the Royal Observatory of Edinburgh by giving the entirety of his scientific library, along with all its apparatus, to the observatory on condition that the government continued to fund its operation. His legacy continues to this day – the Royal Observatory of Edinburgh plays a vital role in the United Kingdom’s part in the European Space Agency while undertaking projects linked to NASA and observatories around the globe.

Ludovic Lindsay’s painstaking restoration of these remarkable family photographs and archival research mean that a chronicle of his forebears’ lives, told through three hundred hitherto unpublished images, is for the first time possible.

The Lindsays of Balcarres: A Century of an Ancient Scottish Family in Photographs
Ludovic Lindsay
Pimpernel Press
£60.00
ISBN 978-1-910258-57-6
Published 7 October 2021

Read more…

Publication: Fleet Street Exposures

12201168895?profile=originalThis book tells the story of Stephen Markson who rose from messenger boy at The Times to the top of his profession as senior staff photojournalist for that paper. The book tells the stories behind the pictures, images and anecdotes that give a tantalising glimpse of the danger and glamour, tragedy and celebrity, seen through the lens of a talented photographer for whom every day was different and every frame counted.

Stephen has compiled an intriguing collection of stories and images from the golden era of Fleet Street, when budgets were limitless, deadlines were tight and getting the film from the camera to the darkroom was often a challenge in itself. His determination saw him and his resourcefulness is apparent in many of the notes that accompany his iconic photographs.

His life was far from ordinary, with experiences ranging from being shadowed by the KGB and threatened by the IRA to hoodwinking Maggie Thatcher and dancing with Elton John. The book will appeal to anyone with an interest in recent history, journalism or photography and particularly in the drama and atmosphere of images shot on black and white film.

Fleet Street Exposures: Diary of a photojournalist
Stephen Markeson
ArtCircus Books, 2021 
£30.00, 168pp
ISBN 978-1-914424-16-8
See: www.stephenmarkeson.com

Read more…

Blog: Friese-Greene protofeminist?

12201176482?profile=originalPeter Domankiewicz has written a blog in which he suggests, and cites evidence, that William Friese-Greene was a supporter of women's rights. Friese-Greene was active when such issues were very topical and the subject of wide debate and in a lecture he gave to Bath Photographic Society in 1890 he stated: '‘Now the next subject I shall connect with this paper, or at least the movement or movements of photography, is the ladies. . .’. 

The blog can be read here: https://www.bristolideas.co.uk/read/friese-greene-protofeminist/?fbclid=IwAR3CmLidCZjL4CjWDRS23dHTNoIQh2m6bFlyHemtT_ozVkY7DRfx2qm9tr0

Read more…

12201174665?profile=originalThe 33rd Annual Daguerreian Society symposium will take place from 15-17 October. The event will include a virtual fair featuring 19th and 20th century photographs, books, and ephemera including images from the highest levels of the art to vernacular snapshots, collectible books, historical images, and a broad range of historical photographic material. It is a show for collectors, curators, galleries, and dealers. 

There will be expert panel discussions and (virtual) tours of exhibitions and collections. The full talks programme will be announced shortly. 

This is an excellent opportunity for curators and historians to reach a receptive -- and enthusiastic -- audience.  With the symposium now a month away, the Society is inviting proposals for Zoom presentations and/or video tours of 19th century photography exhibitions and collections. 

The Daguerreian Society is a non-profit organization devoted to 19th century photography, headquartered in the US but welcoming members from around the globe.

Details and registration here: https://www.daguerreiansociety.org/events/2021-daguerreian-society-virtual-symposium/

Read more…

MFAH acquires Cameron's 'Norman' album

12201167481?profile=originalThe Museum of Fine Art Houston is the final home for Julia Margaret Cameron's 'Norman' album. The album was the subject of an export licence deferral in 2018 but UK institutions were unable, or unwilling, to match an independent valuation of £3.7 million (see links below) and an export licence was granted. The album had been the subject of an earlier export licence application in 2013 when the album had been offered for sale at the Maastricht Art Fair. The application was withdrawn. The purchaser had been unknown until recently.

12201168092?profile=originalMalcolm Daniel, Gus and Lyndall Wortham Curator of Photography, at MFAH, revealed the news to BPH and in his Photography Newsletter  He writes: 'In my last letter, I spoke about two important acquisitions...and I hinted at a third, even more major acquisition that I couldn’t yet speak about. Now I can share that news with you—an acquisition that I described for the Trustees as the single most extraordinary item that I’ve proposed for acquisition in more than 30 years as a photography curator—an album of 75 photographs by Julia Margaret Cameron, one of the greatest portraitists in the history of photography—in my opinion one of the greatest in any medium...This album is exceptional in the number of startlingly perfect prints, no doubt because Cameron took great care in the selection of existing prints or the printing and toning of new prints for this very special presentation album. In a single stroke, with this acquisition the Museum can now claim one of the greatest collections of Cameron’s photography in the world.'

12201168281?profile=originalThe album has found a worthy home where it will be properly cared and made available to the public and for study for by an empathetic and knowledgeable curator. 

Read the MFAH newsletter  MFAH%20Photography%20News%2053.pdf

See previous BPH posts about the Norman album here: 

https://britishphotohistory.ning.com/profiles/blogs/export-licence-deferred-on-cameron-s-norman-album

https://britishphotohistory.ning.com/profiles/blogs/export-of-cultural-objects-2018-19-julia-margaret-cameron-s-the-n

Read more…

12201166861?profile=originalFfotogallery is recruiting a new director to take over when David Drake steps down at the end of the year. The gallery is one of the UK’s leading organisations for contemporary photography and lens-based art. Based in Cardiff, Wales’ capital city, the organisation commissions and presents outstanding and diverse work from Wales and the world, supports the development of artists, and showcases exciting new work developed in Wales.

Since its formation in 1978, Ffotogallery has been at the forefront of new developments in photography and lens- based media in Wales and beyond, encouraging public understanding of photography and a wider appreciation of the role it plays in our understanding of the world around us.

We’re looking for a creative, ambitious individual to take on the role of Director, and to provide artistic and strategic leadership for the organisation.

Please see the Job Pack for more details of the role, along with further background information about Ffotogallery.

See: https://www.ffotogallery.org/channel/opportunity-cyfarwyddwr

Read more…

12201165868?profile=originalIn December 1920, The Strand Magazine published a series of sensational photographs taken by two young girls from Cottingley that allegedly showed real-life fairies dancing at the bottom of their garden. Their authenticity was vouched by no less a person than world-famous Sherlock Holmes creator and spiritualist Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. The images immediately triggered a fierce public debate: were they evidence of the existence of otherworldly nature spirits, of the technical craft and duplicity of their creators, or of the suspect nature of photography itself? The cameras used to produce the pictures, along with Elsie Wright’s famous 1983 “Confession” letter, are today held in the collection of the National Science and Media Museum.

In this talk, Professor Christine Ferguson, Chair in English Studies at the University of Stirling and Principal Investigator on the Media of Mediumship project, discusses what these objects can tell us about the long-standing relationship between technological innovation and alternative spiritual belief in modern Britain.

This talk will be delivered in hybrid format: bookings can be made to attend in person, or to watch online. All Media of Mediumship events are free and open to the public.

‘Fairies Photographed! The Cameo Camera and the Case of the Cottingley Fairies’, Professor Christine Ferguson
Part of the Café Scientifique series 
National Science and Media Museum, Bradford
Free, Online (available) and live (sold out) 30 September 2021, 1830-2000 (BST)

Booking information can be found here: https://www.scienceandmediamuseum.org.uk/whats-on/cafe-scientifique

Read more…

12201165061?profile=originalTennants Auctioneers will be auctioning the library, pictures and camera collection of Eric Hosking OBE Hon.FRPS FBIPP (1909-1991), in its forthcoming Books, Maps & Manuscripts sale being held on 24 November 2021.

The collection is being sold by Eric Hosking’s son David, who is himself a professional photographer and collaborated extensively with Eric. Until recently he was with his wife Jean co-director of the Frank Lane Picture Agency, overseeing the management and licensing of Eric’s photographic archive. The collection contains a set of 30 original signed photographs by Eric Hosking, which are being sold in small groups to benefit the Eric Hosking Trust, with every group being offered with a complimentary copy of Eric Hosking’s Classic Birds (1993), each one of 1,000 copies signed by David Hosking. There are also signed copies of Eric Hosking’s own books including Which Bird? (1998), Just a Lark! (1984), Wildlife Photography (1973), Antarctic Wildlife (1982), and Eric Hosking's Waders (1986), together with items such as Guy Mountfort’s Portrait of a Wilderness. The Story of the Coto Doñana Expeditions (1958), inscribed by Mountfort and Viscount Alanbrooke to Hosking, who was the photographer on the expedition and whose photographs illustrate the book. Most books in the library contain Eric Hosking’s owl bookplate, recalling the famous incident in which he lost an eye to a tawny owl at the age of 28.

Eric Hosking is a name which will require little introduction for ornithology enthusiasts. The first professional bird photographer, he photographed over 1,800 species, and his pictures have appeared in some 800 books, including the popular New Naturalist series, of which he was photographic editor. His technological innovations include the use of flash photography for birds, and the invention of an electronic trigger-mechanism for ultra-high-speed photography of birds in flight. He was also the first to photograph owls in the wild, and famously lost an eye to a tawny owl at the age of 28, an event which proved no measurable hindrance to his career. The incident later inspired the ingenious title of his autobiography, An Eye for a Bird (1970), the foreword to which was written by HRH Prince Philip.

12201164876?profile=originalEric Hosking's centrality to the world of ornithological publishing is captured by a variety of outstanding presentation copies of books now up for sale, by figures including Peter Scott, Roger T. Peterson, Denis Healey (a keen amateur photographer) and David Attenborough, many with highly personalised and admiring inscriptions. Further highlights include excellent copies of Godman's Monograph of the Petrels (1907-10; estimate £1,500-£2,500), Legge's History of the Birds of Ceylon (1880; £1000-£2000), and J. G. Millais's Mammals of Great Britain (1904-6), inscribed by Millais for the illustrator G. E. Lodge, and subsequently inscribed by Lodge for Hosking (£300-£500).

To complement his library, Eric Hosking also built a fine collection of pictures by leading 20th century wildlife artists including Archibald Thorburn, Keith Shackleton and C. F. Tunnicliffe. The sale of his photographic equipment provides an unmissable opportunity to own a remarkable array of high-quality cameras, lenses and other apparatus by manufacturers including Contarex, Hasselblad and Zeiss, and will give skilled users the chance of recreating his photographic feats. 

Offered together in a single sale, Eric Hosking’s library, pictures and camera collection will evoke the life's work of a true pioneer and represent a major event in the year’s auction calendar.

An illustrated catalogue will be available on the Tennants website leading up to the sale: www.tennants.co.uk

For further information please contact Dominic Somerville Brown (books@tennants-ltd.co.uk)

Read more…

Alvin Langdon Coburn grave restoration

12201164098?profile=originalBrian Iddon is leading a project to restore the grave of Alvin Langdon Coburn (1882-1966) at Llandrillo-yn-Rhos, north Wales. Coburn's grave is an poor condition and the plan is to restore the grave and to produce an interpretation plaque at the graveyard in north Wales. The local stone masons have quoted £1122 for the work. The Universal Order which was the beneficiary of his estate has given permission for the restoration and has made a significant donation, along with several others. The balance is now sought. 

Anyone interested in supporting this initiative can reach Brian by email at: brianiddon53@gmail.com

Once the work has been undertaken a formal commemoration will be arranged. 

Coburn is a key figure in early twentieth century photography and significant collections of material are held in the Royal Photographic Society Collection at the V&A Museum, London, and at the John Rylands Research Institute and Library in Manchester. 

A picture of the grave can be seen here: https://historypoints.org/index.php?page=grave-of-alvin-langdon-coburn-llandrillo

Read more…

12201174879?profile=originalTo coincide with the 150th anniversary of Thomas Annan's Old Closes and Streets of Glasgow, photographer Frank McElhinney re-traces Annan's footsteps with a photo trail along the same streets where Annan made the original photographs. Annan's famous street studies of this historic area of Glasgow are shown in the windows of modern businesses along High Street and Saltmarket, taking the viewer on a journey through history.

One hundred and fifty years ago Thomas Annan published a series of thirty-one photographs of the old streets and closes of Glasgow. They are recognised as perhaps the world’s first attempt at what we now call social documentary photography. An 1866 act of parliament had approved the clearance of Glasgow’s overcrowded and epidemic prone slums. With the exception of one photograph made in the Gorbals, all of the rest were made in and around the High Street and Saltmarket. It was once assumed the photographs were commissioned by the City Improvement Trust, but there is no real evidence of this. It is more likely that Annan began the series on his own initiative motivated not just by a speculative commercial imperative but by a desire to highlight the slowly improving condition of Glasgow’s poorest residents. The title of the work suggests architecture was the principal subject but the photographs are teaming with life, full of men, women and children. Annan’s photographs give us a privileged insight into the living conditions of our forebears as no other city, with the possible exception of Paris, has a comparable archive from such an early period in the history of photography. - Frank McElhinney

Find out more and associated events here: https://www.streetlevelphotoworks.org/event/thomas-annan-photo-trail

Read more…