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Booths at London Photograph Fair

We're introducing booths at the London Photograph Fair for the first time. On May 15th we will have a dozen booths, allowing dealers to exhibit their best material in the appropriate environment. We've got a record level of bookings - with  more than 40 tables also reserved, and dealers coming from the UK, Europe and North America. As with our last fair, we are also offering free entry after 2pm on production of a voucher. Full details are on the website. Look forward to seeing you there!

Click HERE to view our website.

Detailed press release below:

 

Dealer booths to be introduced for May Fair.

The London Photograph Fair is to introduce booths for dealers for the first time.  At the next Fair on May 15th, a limited number of booths will be available, allowing dealers to hang prints. In the past the fair has run as a tabletop only event, but the organisers are keen to try the new format to gauge the response from dealers and the public.

Fair organiser James Kerr said:

“Part of the attraction of the fair is for buyers to be able to hunt for bargains among the huge variety of material on offer. However we recognise that premium items need to be shown to their best advantage, and we hope that this will allow dealers to maximise the display of their stock.

“At the May 15th event, 12 booths will be in use, giving each dealer 5 metres of hanging space. If the experiment proves successful it will be repeated later in the year, with plans for more widespread use at selected events in the future.

“We are keen to position the London Photograph Fair as a true collectors’ fair, with well presented material on offer, at prices to suit all budgets. What we hope to provide is a convivial environment where interesting images can be displayed in an appropriate fashion. At the same time we want it to be cost effective for dealers; so that they can get their stock seen on a regular basis without the heavy overheads associated with the major multi-day fairs. We think that the introduction of booths at selected events is an important step in this process. “

Demand has been strong for the fair on May 15th with all 12 booths taken, as well as more than 40 tables. Dealers are attending from the UK, Europe and North America. On display will be a wide range of vintage images, along with some more contemporary items, and a wide range of photo books.

The London Photograph Fair is the UK’s premier event for photography collectors. It takes place four times a year at the Holiday Inn Bloomsbury, which is just 10 minutes walk from both Euston and King’s Cross/St. Pancras mainline train stations.

Full details of the fair are available on www.photofair.co.uk with the contact details for regular participants also provided. A preview of selected images that will be offered at the Fair will be available on the website in the run-up to the event. Once again free entry is available to the event after 2pm on production of a voucher. This can be obtained by emailing info@photofair.co.uk. Anyone joining the mailing list will be entered in a draw for a £100 voucher, redeemable at the Fair.

For more details please contact:

James Kerr

T: 07802 333841

E: info@photofair.co.uk

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Few of the process workers of to-day can remember the year 1860, and those who remember it were not then process workers – they must have been nestling in their mothers’ arms, or filled with a laudable ambition to form correct pothooks and hangers at the school desk, or perchance they were still in the dark room undeveloped. Besides, at that time there were no processes to work in the way we understand to-day. At most a method of surface printing in the nature of lithography was practised, and that only by Government, probably. If my recollection be correct, there were no metal relief blocks with a photographic basis of any kind. Wonderful strides have been made since then, and the progress of a century has been pressed into thirty-five years.

But the main purpose of these few lines (and they must be few in deference to a hint from Mr. Editor) is to give, in a sketchy way, to the younger workers of to-day some idea of the difference in the labor of making negatives (especially out-of-doors) between then and now. At that time the Frena-ite and the Kodak-ite were not in the land, and no gelatine plates as we have them now. There were a few collodion dry plates introduced by Fothergill and Dr. Hill Norris – slow and not sure. I can remember exposing them for a quarter of an hour or more on outdoor subjects, with passable results. But the work that “took it out of you,” as the saying is, was the manipulation of large wet plates away from the studio, and the carrying (of) all the necessary paraphernalia into the field with you. Then (sic) were the days of the silver bath and immediate development of the exposed plate. None of your exposures at the other side of the globe and development at home six months afterwards. My experience was with 12 x 10 plates - that was my size if I may so say. Consider the requirements: a certain number of plates, each weighing about a pound a large containing bath, often made of gutta percha for lightness, for the silver solution, which had a provoking way of oozing out of the bath at the so-called tight-top, and getting into places where it was not wanted; a bottle of collodion, the stopper of which had a nasty habit of flying out in hot weather (experience taught me to prefer corks), and several bottles, not too small, for developers, fixing solution etc. Then there was the large camera - mine went down flat like an opera-hat, and for long journeys was packed into a leather case - and, of course, the tripod stand.

Another absolute necessity in the then condition of things was to provide a dark room at the scene of operations, or to carry a dark tent with you. Who uses a dark tent now? Who even hears of one? On arriving where the pictures were to be taken, if a country house, as it frequently was, the first duty was to perambulate its lower regions or outbuildings to find a suitable place for developing. Many and various have they been - coal-cellars, beer-cellars, pantries, cupboards under-stairs, water closets, harness rooms, stable boxes, stoke-holes (prenez garde la duste), wood sheds, etc., etc., in some of which places much engineering was required to keep out the daylight. When it fell to my lot to have a room with a regular window, I covered it up with a yellow blind, always carried with the apparatus and often used as stuffing to keep the bottles and other things steady when packed. Such a contrivance would he utterly useless for filtering the light in working the plates now used. In places where there was no window an ordinary candle gave the necessary light - another item now out of the question. At the mention of candles I am reminded of a little incident that might have grown into a great event. I was engaged at a large warehouse in Queen Victoria Street, City, and had to make a dark room of a cupboard under the stairs - it was a receptacle for waste paper and other odds and ends - there was none too much room, and I found it necessary to work in a kneeling position. I had just coated a 12 x 10 plate with collodion, when suddenly I was startled with a sheet of flame burning in front of my face; the vapour of the collodion had come too near the candle, and the whole plate was ablaze a la snapdragon. Fortunately I kept hold of the plate, and with vigorous blowing I put out the flame. I felt a little hot myself also, and when I had cooled down a bit I started a fresh plate.

About 1861 or 2 I was one day called upon to go to France to take some views. I think it was required that I should start the next day, and naturally I was much exercised in mind as to the most convenient way of transporting the impedimenta. The camera was provided for by its leather-case, and the tripod was nothing to speak of, but the silver bath, plates and bottles demanded serious consideration. I resolved to have a special carrying box, and set to work in the evening to construct one, measuring about twenty-four by twenty by ten inches with divisions for the various items and grooved space for plates. I made it to open at top and also in front, and covered it with canvas, which, after well sizing, I painted with quick drying black. Lastly, I fitted long straps all round it both ways, which served as a good handle for carrying. It needed a little enthusiasm to do this, for I had to sit up the whole night to get through the work, but by breakfast time it was ready - rather more so than I was. I had the satisfaction afterwards of finding it most useful. It has travelled thousands of miles with me since that time, including another journey to France; and, having a sort of affection for it. I still keep it - although it has become obsolete and has not been used for many years. Moreover, I have been occupied with the pencil more than the camera. This same box was the innocent cause of a ludicrous accident. Returning from a one day photographic expedition, I had arrived at my railway station near home, and left the box and camera to be brought on by the private porter. He strapped them together and slung them over his shoulder, the black box at the back. In due time he delivered them, and went away with his usual fee. Next day, however, he appeared again without being sent for. He carried an elongated face, and over his arm, a pair of new nankeen trousers, which be exhibited to me with an air of martyrdom. All down the back from the waist to the heels they were covered with long chocolate colored stripes. He was puzzled but I knew what was the matter. It was that tight top bath, which had been running over, and the silver solution dribbling out at the bottom of the box. I comforted him with the assurance that I could make the trousers all right, and cyanide did the rest.

In subsequent years I gave a good deal of time to taking photographs in the streets of London. Many incidents occurred in connection with this work, which, if related now, would read us ancient history, but I am afraid my space is already exhausted. The picturesque character of some parts of London (there are not so many now) had long been present to my mind. I found a good number of subjects in Old Lambeth between Westminster and Vauxhall. One of the illustrations, which, with some others all reduced from 12 x 10 negatives, have been so ably produced by the Swan Electric Engraving Company, shows Bishop’s Walk, then the principal thoroughfare (pedestrian) between Westminster Bridge and Lambeth Palace. This was such a picturesque bit of old London, that a word or two of explanation may be acceptable. The wall an the left was the boundary of the Archbishop of Canterbury’s grounds. The houses, no doubt, once upon a time, were residences of the leading inhabitants, but at the time the view was taken (1866) were mostly used for trade purposes. There was a picture frame maker, a boathouse and letting place belonging to Searle, a firm of barge builders, etc. Immediately beyond the distant houses one came upon the open river and Lambeth Palace. The other illustration is a view of St. Paul’s and Queenhithe from Southwark Bridge. For this, I went to the point of view three or four times before I found the atmosphere sufficiently clear. Let those who may be interested notice the difference in the same view to-day. I made a large number of pictures of this class, the negatives of which I still have, but they have been very little seen. In this work I was assisted very much by a large dark tent or house on wheels (a home-made one). It had a boarded floor and carried all the working plant, and was large enough for me to stand upright in, with ample elbow room. (Pardon a parenthesis. As I write these words the clock strikes twelve, and 1895 has gone to join the majority and is now in company with the Year One—I doubt if this earth will see 6,000 years more.) This dark tent was drawn by a man, and on arriving at a given point. I could have a plate ready in ten minutes. There is a history attached to this carriage, but I cannot go into it here. It was finally sold at Stevens’s Sale Rooms, Covent Garden, for, I think, fourteen shillings.



IMG_0006.jpgBishop's Walk, Lambeth
from a 12 by 10 wet collodion negative taken by Mr. Wm. Strudwick, 17th April, 1866
Copper Etching
Reproduced by Swan Electric Engraving Co., Ltd., 116 Charing Cross Road, London, W.C.



IMG_0005.jpgSt. Paul's and Queenhithe.
from a 12 by 10 wet collodian negative taken by Mr. Wm. Strudwick, September 3rd, 1866.
Reproduced by Swan Electric Engraving Co.


Who shall say what the next fifty years shall bring forth in photography and its surroundings? Arguing from what has been to what may be, the results that to-day are reasonably and really wonderful, may be totally eclipsed by facts which we dare not now think of.

The few lines of the above concluding paragraph have been quickly justified by the newest phase of photography. We have been more or less startled with photographs of the “unseen” skeleton hands, unopened purses with money in them, transparent frogs, etc. By the way, how frequently froggy takes a part in scientific enquiry - he is continually being made an assistant demonstrator in one branch or another. Will life be worth living when we shall be able to see through one another so readily? It occurs to me to suggest a new line of photographic business. Let the photographer advertise: “Hearts photographed by the New Light,” so that when a young man declares his affection, the lady may invoke the aid of photographs to help her to see if his heart be true. As a secondary item of advertisement may be added “Sweethearts taken as usual any afternoon or by appointment.”

from: The Process Year Book 1896, Penrose & Co., London, pages 78 to 81.
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12200912090?profile=originalFor sale at http://www.rubylane.com/shops/molotov/iteml/6469#pic1 - is a bronze plaque awarded to John Henry Gear by  l’Association Belge de Photographie at their 1896 Exposition.

John Henry GEAR was born 1859 at Yeovil, Somerset, England. He was listed as a teacher at the 1881 Census at Gloucester, England. He later worked in London, teaching photography at the Cripplegate Institute, and had a photographic school at 8 Nottingham Terrace, Regents Park, London.



12200913078?profile=original

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I am completing a project to create a searchable database of Photographic Society of London, later the Royal Photographic Society, members from 1853-1900. The database will be made publicly and freely available through the internet by De Montfort University in the Summer. If it is well received then its coverage may be extended. The project is well advanced with some 2200 unique names, addresses, membership category(ies) and relevant dates.

The data has been sourced from published Society membership lists, the Photographic Journal and Council Minutes held in the RPS Collection at the National Media Museum, Bradford, and from other libraries and research collections. However, there are membership lists missing for particular years, especially for the early period, although it is probable that no such list was published for some of these. To ensure that the database is as complete as possible I am looking to track down missing membership lists for the following years: 1855; 1856; 1858; 1860-65; 1867-68 (PJ states none published); 1871-73; 1876-77; 1894; 1898. They are usually found bound in the respective volume of the Photographic Journal.

Perhaps those of you with institutional files, libraries or collections could check these for me. If you find you have any such lists please contact me off-list.

With thanks.

Dr Michael Pritchard

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Turkish DeLIGHT

12200911495?profile=originalA new exhibition which explores the birth of Turkish photography has been curated by Bursa-born Engin Özendes. Entitled “Kez Gı Sirem İstanbul/Seni Seviyorum İstanbul” (“I love you İstanbul”), the exhibit will display over 100 images and documents showing how İstanbul has changed through the eyes of Armenian photographers, based on three different periods over the past 150 years.

The earliest photographs exhibited focus on a period dominated by the ethnically Armenian Ottoman Abdullah brothers, who were instrumental in the birth of Turkish photography, as well as the likes of Pascal Sebah (Sebah & Joaillier) Mihran İranyan, Aşil Samancı (Ateliers Apollon) and Boğos Tarkulyan (Photographie Phebus).

Özendes also presents an in-depth display of the post-1950 works of globally acclaimed İstanbul-born photographer, Ara Güler. Of Armenian ancestry, Güler’s striking İstanbul shots, such as that of Armenian fishermen at Kumkapı taken in 1952, have marked him as one of the foremost figures in international creative photography.

Curator Özendes explains that the importance of the exhibition lies in raising awareness of the strong Armenian influence in the birth of Turkish photography. “The 19th Century was a period when many young Armenians were sent beyond Ottoman soil to various parts of Europe for education. Here, arts institutes such as the Murad-Raphaelian in Venice were instrumental in schooling young Armenians in various art disciplines, including photography. These skills were then brought back to İstanbul, where many of the Armenians opened distinguished photography studios, most notably that of the Abdullah brothers. This was to be the main introduction of professional photography to Turkey, where the trade quickly filtered throughout İstanbul and wider Anatolia.”

Details of the exhibition can be found here.

 

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12200919895?profile=originalFounded in 1985 by the Hungarian publisher Andor Kraszna-Krausz, the Kraszna-Krausz Book Awards showcase excellence among books on the still and moving image. The foundation awards two prizes of £5,000 per year to books offering the most significant contribution to photographic and/or moving image scholarship, history, criticism, science and conservation. The Kraszna-Krausz Book Awards will be announced during the Sony World Photography Awards in London, 27 April 2011.

This year's Best Photography Book Award shortlist includes  Camille Silvy: Photographer of Modern Life 1834–1910 (£25), the catalogue for last year’s exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery by Mark Haworth-Booth, and for the Moving Image category, Philip Brookman’s catalogue for the Tate show, Eadweard Muybridge.

The full list and details of the judges can be found here.

 

Best Photography Book Award Shortlist

•TJ: Johannesburg Photographs 1948-2010 / Double Negative: A Novel, David Goldblatt and Ivan Vladislaviċ (Contrasto)
•The Thirty Two Inch Ruler / Map of Babylon, John Gossage (Steidl)
•Camille Silvy: Photographer of Modern Life 1834 – 1910, Mark Haworth-Booth (The National Portrait Gallery)
Best Moving Image Book Award Shortlist

•Von Sternberg, John Baxter (The University Press of Kentucky)
•Eadweard Muybridge, Philip Brookman (Corcoran Gallery of Art, Tate Publishing, Steidl)
•Illuminations: Memorable Movie Moments, Richard D. Pepperman (Michael Wiese Productions)
•Disappearing Tricks: Silent Film, Houdini, and the New Magic of the 20th Century, Matthew Solomon (University of Illinois Press)

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Salt Print: Rich Pickings .....

12200917857?profile=originalIf you're feeling rich or have some loose change in your pocket after the cuts, how about an early original salt print of Daguerre made by Whipple in 1855? Apparently used to illustrate the February 1855 issue of The Photographic and Fine Art Journal, only 4 other examples are know to exist!

All this for a mere US $100,000 (or approx. £61,500 in good old English notes). Check it out on the ebay listing here. Or it's item number 200535461355.

 

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Birmingham Library and Archive Services has acquired a rare set of the suite  of  3  portfolios  entitled  "Photographic  Pictures Made By Mr. Francis Bedford  During  the  Tour in the East in which, by command, he accompanied His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales" , published by Day & Son, 1862. These contain 172  prints, each  approximately 8 3/4x11 inches (22.2x27.9  cm.), many with Bedford's credit in the negative with a single photograph mounted to each leaf.  The portfilios were aquired for £55000 with grants of £32500 from the Art Fund and £15000 from the MLA/V&A Purchase Grant Fund.  The collection will be housed in the Library of Birmingham, currently under construction and due to open in 2013.

Birmingham  Central Library already  holds  a substantial body of work by and about Francis Bedford.  This includes 2700 glass negatives and 2049 prints, mostly architectural and topographical views of Great Britain c1870-1880, published works illustrated with Bedford photographs including W.M. Thompson, The Holy Land, Egypt, Constantinople and Athens, 1866; Photographic Views of Torquay c1865, Photographic Views of Warwickshire c1865 and a comprehensive catalogue of all Bedford topographical photographs including Cabinet, Large Cabinet, Panoramic, Small Cabinets, Large Photographs, and Small Panoramic Miniature Views. The acquisition also complements an already significant collection of 18th and 19th century published works on the archaeology, history and culture of the Middle East.  

Stephen Deuchar, Director of the Art Fund, said, “We’re thrilled to have helped with the purchase of this fantastic collection of historic photographs which tell us so much about the UK’s history in ‘the  East’ and offers a fascinating insight into the role of the Royal family some 150 years ago. Over the past few years we’ve helped Birmingham Library and Archive Services with a number of major photography acquisitions and look forward to the opening of the Library of Birmingham and the fantastic displays it will bring to members of the public.  12200919853?profile=originalThe acquisition bolsters Birmingham’s reputation locally, nationally and internationally as a centre for the history of photography, particularly within the context of the photography research centre to be created as part of the new Library of Birmingham.  In recent years, the Art Fund, the national fund-raising charity for works of art, has helped Birmingham Library and Archive Services with a number of major acquisitions. These include a £42,695 grant towards the John Blakemore Archive (2010), £6000 towards the Back to the Village series by Anna Fox (2009) and £12,000 towards the Sir Benjamin Stone Legacy Collection (2008).

    

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12200916863?profile=originalTo coincide with the start of America's observance of the sesquicentennial of the Civil War, which began 150 years ago on 12th April, a new exhibition featuring 400 haunting images will be held at the Jefferson Building, Library of Congress. Entitled “The Last Full Measure: Civil War Photographs from the Liljenquist Family Collection,” these are striking images, especially of young enlisted men. They often show weapons, hats, canteens, musical instruments, painted backdrops, and other details that enhance the research value of the collection. Among the most rare images are sailors, African Americans in uniform, a Lincoln campaign button, and portraits of soldiers with their families and friends.

The pictures are from the collection of the McLean jeweler Tom Liljenquist and his sons, who donated 700 glass ambrotypes and metal tintypes to the library last year. The family has been collecting the photographs for 15 years. Most of the photographs are small, some not much bigger than a pack of matches. They are arranged in neat rows inside glass cases in a way that almost gives the effect of a quilt. The library is also setting up two interactive stations at the exhibit where the pictures can be uploaded onto a computer screen and then enlarged to reveal the most minute details.

Details of this collection can be found here, and of this forthcoming exhibition here.

 

 

 

 

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12200919074?profile=originalAn introduction to Victorian and Edwardian portraits (Peter Funnell and Jan Marsh) selected by the National Portrait Gallery and the National Trust. From the revolutionary ideas of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood in the mid-nineteenth century to outstanding society portraits of the early twentieth century, this guide encompasses the invention of photography, large narrative paintings and popular prints depicting events, royalty, statesmen, soldiers, scientists, actors and writers.

The Victorians and Edwardians believed passionately in the historical importance of their age and wanted to record the great figures of their time. During Queen Victoria’s reign (1837–1901) Britain became the world’s first industrialised commercial power. This wealth, combined with the prestige of the British empire, created an extraordinary source of patronage for portraiture, and a legacy that includes the world’s first dedicated gallery of portraits – the National Portrait Gallery, London.

This informative and accessible guide reveals an astonishing range of styles, techniques and subjects from the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. Illustrations and engaging commentaries on sitters, from Charles Darwin to Virginia Woolf, shed light on the various ways in which people chose to be presented – wherever possible using the actual words of the artists, photographers and their subjects themselves.

Although Edward VII’s reign lasted for less than a decade (1901–10), he oversaw not only the growth of a more democratic state, but also the development of art education and training for women artists. The Edwardian sitters featured in this book reveal the changing society that came to influence twentieth-century British portraiture.

Published in association with the National Trust. Click on the Amazon link on the right to purchase a copy.

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12200915096?profile=originalEugène Atget was not a trained photographer. Instead he only turned to this medium having been unsuccessful in other vocations. Having to earn a living, he took up photography and started out in the provinces but soon arrived in Paris where he lived for the rest of his life. Atget worked anonymously and was considered a commercial photographer who sold what he called “documents for artists”, i.e. photographs of landscapes, close-up shots, genre scenes and other details that painters could use as models. However, as soon as Atget turned his attention to photographing the streets of Paris, his work attracted the attention of leading institutions such as the Musée Carnavalet and the Bibliothèque Nationale, which became his principal clients.

Now Atget's work can be viewed in a new exhibition which is organised into 12 sections that correspond to the thematic groupings used by the man himself. They are: small trades, Parisian types and shops, 1898-1922; the streets of Paris, 1898-1913; ornaments, 1900-1921; interiors, 1901-1910; cars, 1903-1910; gardens, 1898-1914; the Seine, 1900-1923; the streets of Paris, 1921-1924; outside the city centre, 1899-1913; and the outskirts of Paris, 1901-1921.

Details of this exhibition can be found here.

 

Photo:  Chanteuse de rue et joueur d'orgue de Barbarie, 1898 | Eugène Atget | Musée Carnavalet, Paris | © Eugène Atget / Musée Carnavalet / Roger-Viollet

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12200918266?profile=originalDe Montfort University, Leicester, has appointed Dr Elizabeth Edwards as Research Professor in Photographic History. She joins the De Montort team from her previous role as Senior Research Fellow at University of the Arts, London, on 1 June 2011. Her research interests are noted here: http://www.lcc.arts.ac.uk/Elizabeth_Edwards_research.htm.

The post was advertised in November last year and was previously noted on BPH http://britishphotohistory.ning.com/profiles/blogs/job-research-professor-in.  Edwards will offer some support to De Montfort's acclaimed History of Photgraphy and Practice MA course led by Dr Kelley Wilder, but as with her predecessor Roger Taylor who held the Professorship from its inception, Edwards' focus will be on securing research funding, developing the research base and profile of the photographic history department, and she also becomes the first Director of the Photographic History Research Centre based at the university. The PHRC is currently recruiting a PhD student to examine the nature of Kodak research.

The university will be making a formal announcement in due course but as news now appears to be public BPH feels able to note the appointment now.

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12200915895?profile=originalSince 1660, the Royal Society has been collecting documents sent to it from all over the world which includes travel journals, diaries and letters. These have been digitised and published on a regular basis by the Royal Society on their website. So far, the Royal Society has digitised and released fewer than 20 documents from its archive of more than 250,000.

Of interest to fellow BPH members are some of the documents published online today. They include accounts from Robert Falcon Scott, commander of the expedition to the Antarctic, during the earliest British attempt to survey the frozen continent between 1901 and 1904. He talks of balloon flights over the unexplored continent and an account of a sledge journey to the furthest point south then reached, a journey that almost killed his companion Ernest Shackleton.

Another one are pages from the diary of the astronomer (and also botanist, chemist, mathematician, to name but a few!) John Herschel from 1839 which give some insight into his role as the co-inventor of photography. According to Keith Moore, head of library and archives at the Royal Society's Centre for History of Science, "William Henry Fox Talbot has this great idea to use a camera to take an image, but he couldn't fix the image and make it permanent on paper. It was John Herschel who did that. Herschel was effectively the co-inventor of photography and that's evident from the diaries in 1839 where he's talking about his photographic experiments."

You can check them out for yourself at the Royal Society's website here.

A piece of trivial:  Herschel was held in high esteem by his Victorian peers; he is buried in Westminster Abbey and lies next to the two aforementioned titans of science, Darwin and Newton.

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12200914656?profile=originalThrough the Colonial Lens will feature more than 70 images, looking at the history of photography in India from its early adoption dating from the 1840s through the early 1900s and will explore themes of the subjective view, consumption of images and photography’s growing prominence over earlier forms of visual media. Drawing from local private collections, Through the Colonial Lens will feature the work of both amateur and professional photographers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, including Samuel Bourne, Lala Deen Dayal, Edward Lyon and John Murray.

Each photographer exhibited in Through the Colonial Lens responded in varying degrees to the dual demands of their artistic eye and professional duties, whether Captain E.D. Lyon in south India, a British military officer tasked with documenting a historic site, or Lala Deen Dayal (1844-1910), a professional photographer with a studio in Mumbai. Samuel Bourne (1834-1912), along with others, brought his idea of the ‘picturesque’ with him from Britain to many of the images he took in India, a concept steeped in the Romanticism of 18th-century Europe.

The Victorian era’s emphasis on the role of science and technology, specifically natural history, led to a seeming mania for taxonomy. This urge to classify newly encountered phenomenon can be seen in the development of photography in the subcontinent. Military officers such as Captain Thomas Biggs and Captain Linnaeus Tripe were given reassignments from their military duties in order to photo-document local architecture, which provided key information to the newly-formed Archaeological Survey of India. Photography was understood to be closely linked to other scientific pursuits, with doctors in the British military, such as Dr. John Murray and Dr. William Henry Pigou, as early enthusiasts. Efforts to provide comprehensive photography of a wide swath of the diverse population of India were closely tied to the nascent fields of anthropology and ethnography.

Further information can be found here, and details of the exhibition here.

 

Photo:  Samuel Bourne (British, 1834-1912)
Kutub Minar with the Great Arch, from the West

Delhi,1866, Albumen print. Loaned by Catherine Glynn Benkaim and Barbara Timmer

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Victorian Photography the Paxman way

Some of you may have caught the BBC series last year. But for those who missed it, here's a reminder of an entertaining clip of Jeremy Paxman doing Victorian photography ..... The clip features the Reeves of Lewes photographic, established 1855 which still has its negatives back to its founding.

 

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