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12200936077?profile=originalAlmost £30,000 in grants have been awarded to Denbighshire Archives in a number of restoration projects, one of which includes rare 19th century photo books of habitual criminals (taken between the 1860-90s) used by the Denbighshire Constabulary to keep check on repeat offenders.

The books were formerly owned by Denbighshire Constabulary, created in 1848, now North Wales Police, and were used by officers to keep check on people with criminal records. They give a colourful description of people with criminal records, including their photo.

The items will go on show, some for the first time, once the work is completed. Would be interesting to see if I recognise any long, lost family members! You can read the rest of this interesting BBC article here


Photo: Criminal records: This man was 'liberated' in 1874 after being sentenced to 'penal servitude' for robbery with violence.

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12200944669?profile=originalTW Gaze Auction Rooms, on Roydon Road in Diss will be auctioning off this Friday (17/2/12) an impressive collection of about 1,000 photographs capturing 19th century every day life in East Anglia. Taken by renowned mid-Norfolk photographer Herbert T Cave, who spent time living in Dereham and Swaffham, it includes images in various themes, including agriculture, social life, equestrian, retail, scenery and architecture. 

The collection has been separated into about 30 lots and is estimated to be worth a total of £1,000. Collectively it depicts the nature of East Anglia at the turn of the 19th century in a high level of clarity.

The sale will also consist of about 200 items of photographic interest including cameras, lenses, magic lantern slides and photographs from the 19th to the 21st centuries. The collection can be viewed on Thursday, from 2pm until 8pm and on Friday from 8.30am.

The auction catalogue can be found here.

Photo: One of the Herbert T Cave pictures on sale.

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Gernsheim Collection collects another gong!

12200944283?profile=originalHaving won the Fred Whitehead Award for Best Book Design as mentioned in a previous posting herethe book, 'The Gernsheim Collection' which includes more than 125 full-page plates from the Ransom Center's collection, has just picked up another accolade. It has been awarded an Alfred H. Barr Jr. Award, which honours a distinguished catalogue in the history of art published during the past year.

The Gernsheim collection is one of the most important collections of photography in the world. Amassed by the renowned husband-and-wife team of Helmut and Alison Gernsheim between 1945 and 1963, it contains an unparalleled range of images, beginning with the world's earliest-known photograph from nature, made by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce in 1826.

The Gernsheim collection includes 35,000 major and representative photographs from the 19th and 20th centuries; a research library of 3,600 books, journals and published articles; about 250 autographed letters and manuscripts; and more than 200 pieces of early photographic equipment. Its encyclopedic scope makes the Gernsheim collection one of the world's premier resources for the study and appreciation of the development of photography.

Edited by Ransom Center Senior Research Curator Roy Flukinger.The catalog also traces the Gernsheims' passion for collecting and their career as pioneering historians of photography, showing how their efforts significantly contributed to the acceptance of photography as a fine art and as a field worthy of intellectual study. The book also includes a preface by former Ransom Center Curator of Photography David Coleman, a foreword by George Eastman House Curator of Photographs Alison Nordström and an afterword by former Victoria and Albert Museum Curator Mark Haworth-Booth.

You can pick up a copy yourself as reference using the Amazon link on the right. At the rate it's going, Adele should start getting worried ....

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12200934491?profile=originalThis is my first post...You need to zoom in on the faces of these children and you will see that each and everyone has a loop of thread, or whatever, gripped between their lips.  Nobody I have asked so far has ever seen this before. 

Was it a common event in 1900, when this picture was taken in Yorkshire, to keep the little dears still?

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Courtauld History of Photography seminars

The Courtauld History of Photography Research seminars start on 22 February:

Wednesday February 22, 2012 at 5.30 pm, Research Forum South Room
Speaker: Jan Banning (Photographer)
Title: Bureaucratics and Other Unorderly Subjects

Wednesday 18 April 2012 at 5.30 pm, Research Forum South Room
Speaker: Dr Sarah Edith James
Title: ‘Karl Pawek's Post-fascistic Family of Man: A Cold War Photo-Essay’

Wednesday June 6, 2012 at 5.30 pm, Research Forum South Room
Speaker: Stephen McLaren (Photographer)
Title: ‘Being there with a camera and Schrödinger's cat’

Courtauld History of Photography seminars:

Research Forum

The Courtauld Institute of Art

Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 0RN

tel: 020 7848 2909

Email: researchforum@courtauld.ac.uk

www.courtauld.ac.uk

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12200941874?profile=originalThe Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, is showing Silver, Salt, and Sunlight: Early Photography in Britain and France from February 7, 2012-August 5, 2012. It has been curated by Anne E. Havinga.

The invention of photography in 1839 was a pivotal achievement that changed the course of cultural history. The early years of the medium were rich in experimentation. As each process and technique was invented, artists enthusiastically explored new possibilities for visual recording and expression. This exhibition celebrates the golden age of early photography in France and Britain, the two countries in which the medium was simultaneously invented.

Arranged according to theme and exploring a range of photographic approaches, “Silver, Salt, and Sunlight” features some rare early photographs from the Museum's collection. Among the photographic pioneers included are William Henry Fox Talbot, Hill and Adamson, Roger Fenton, Edouard Baldus, Gustave Le Gray, Nadar, Julia Margaret Cameron, and Francis Frith.

For more information: http://www.mfa.org/exhibitions/silver-salt-and-sunlight and for a review: http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2012/2/14/MFA-early-photography-exhibit/ 


Image: Gustave Le Gray’s “Cloudy Sky—The Mediterranean with Mount Agde.” The photograph is an albumen print from wet collodion glass plate negative.

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Spotlight Photos GB

I'm wondering if anyone might be able to throw a bit more (spot) light onto this company? Taking 'walking pictures' across the UK between around 1932 until 1937 I would love to know more about how the business operated, or whether it was an early franchise system. All the Spotlight walking photos I have seen have three consecutive frames so were clearly taken using an adapted cine camera. I'll add a sample here but you can read more on my site at Spotlight GB.

WP268.jpg

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12200938262?profile=originalIn 1853 an unprecedented exhibition of photography toured Britain. It came to Scotland and was celebrated as the product of a “union” with London. In the press, photography itself was positioned as an art historical descendent of alchemy, a perfect blend of art and science, mysticism and religion. Readers were asked to compare this new medium to other technological inventions magically transforming the world like the train and the telegraph, which enabled them to “travel by fire and speak by lightening.” As a consequence, the general public were impelled to view photography as a grand idea; something new and patriotic, as well as something that could link local communities in a national cause.

After discussing the potency of an exhibition as a site for distributing state enforced ideology in the nineteenth century, this lecture illustrates how the 1853 photographic exhibition stimulated the practice of photography at a local level. More specifically, it reveals how the organisers, all based in London and affiliated with the Royal Society of Arts, established a picturesque aesthetic for photography that was resolutely English. The message the exhibition sent to regions across Britain was that the gnarled oak, quiet village scene and babbling brook were the subjects of the best photographs in the Kingdom; and these were the sites locals should seek out in order to establish their professionalism. In doing this the travelling exhibition softly propagated a colonial vision of England’s role as educator and civiliser of clans and nations. It also reflected a commonly held belief that Britain was stronger as a united inclusive force, not one driven by the insular nationalism that had led other European nations into revolutions during the late 1840s.

Details of this talk by Antonia Laurence-Allen, PhD Candidate, School of Art History can be found here.

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Does anyone recognise this school?

12200933464?profile=originalThe location of the school in this image of young women practising tennis and lacrosse has eluded me for years. The other images in the album were predominantly Scottish, so I would love to think it was a Scottish school, but have no leads whatsoever at the moment. If anyone can suggest where it might be, I'd be delighted. Thanks. John Hannavy

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9-week FREE Cultural Curators Course in London!

12200937474?profile=originalI think is this more on the 'arty' side of things, but I'm sure the skills are transferable to running a photo gallery. And it's FREE!

Mapalim is offering you a chance to learn how to run an art gallery with their free course in curating - details here

Gain the experience, Level 3 qualifications and the chance to curate your own exhibition at The Parlour Studios & Project Space.

Nowadays, the creative and cultural sector is more competitive than ever. This Cultural Curators Programme offers an opportunity to increase one’s marketability by achieving a nationally recognized qualification in Cultural Venue Operations.

We invite anyone with a proven interest in the arts, a personal arts practice, prior experience of venue operations and/or event organization, or anyone who is motivated and committed to learning something new to apply for the Cultural Curators Programme.

Have the opportunity to:

  • Learn the essential non-art side to organizing exhibitions and events.
  • Gain Level 3 qualifications in ‘Cultural Venue Operations’ and ‘Principles of the Creative and Cultural Sector.’
  • Earn £835 upon completion of the program and the qualifications. (20 week option, employed by Mapalim only)
  • Design, market, run and manage your own art exhibition (with other people’s art, not your own!) and community events.
  • Learn aspects of venue management such as health & safety, photo image capture and guided tours.
  • Gain valuable experience that will help you further your career in the creative field.
  • Do this course around your day job!

To organise your exhibition you will work in a group of 5 and each have a job role of either Curator, Community Outreach, Marketing, Logistics or Finance. However every member of the group will have full input in all areas. The time commitment will be 8 hours per week in either evenings or weekends (see 'Which course is right for me?'), half of the time will be workshop delivery and the other half will be to work on your exhibition.

To be eligible you must:

  • Be aged 19-24
  • Be a UK/EU citizen or have lived in the UK for 3 years

The ideal candidate for this role will be extremely hardworking and a motivated team player, taking on this course as a challenge. You will have the opportunity to use the Cultural Curators Course as leverage to market yourself as a curator, marketer or events manager.

Which course is right for me?

9 week course - Wed/Thurs evenings, 5:30pm - 9:30pm. Intakes are 13/03/12, 15/05/12. To apply, please send your name, telephone number and DOB to skills@mapalim.com with 'Cultural Curators 9 Week' as the subject.

20 week course - Wed/Fri evenings, 5:30pm - 9:30pm. Intake is 28/03/12. To apply, please send your name, telephone number and DOB to skills@mapalim.com with 'Cultural Curators 20 Week' as the subject.

20 week course, for those employed in the arts sector - To be eligible for this you must be working for an arts organisation, arts job role or job somehow connected to the arts, 16 hours or more per week. You must be earning at least £2.50 per hour in this job. The course will run on Saturdays 10am - 6pm. Intakes are 04/02/12 and 23/06/12. To apply, please send your name, telephone number, place of work, number of paid hours you work per week and your DOB to skills@mapalim.com with 'Cultural Curators Extended' as the subject

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12200932691?profile=originalThat's what The Arts Council of Great Britain once described the portrait work of William Johnson Jennis Bolding (1815-1899). Much of his photography dates from the mid to late 1850s when the medium was still in its infancy and some of those his camera immortalised were ordinary Norfolk people born as far back as the 1770s.

But his name is today largely unknown. Richard Jefferson, whose late wife Pauline was Bolding’s great great niece, hopes to correct that with a heavily-illustrated book on his life and work in the future, and a talk to The Friends of the Norwich Museums next week. His talk will also include details of Bolding’s connections with Norwich School artists, including John Middleton.

Details of the lecture can be found here, and a news article here.

Photo: A local man photographed by WJJ Bolding

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William Foster Brigham

Following the small display of Walking Pictures I put on at Sewerby Hall in 2011, they are preparing an exhibition on William Foster Brigham for 2012. He was the owner of Snaps in Bridlington who were the busiest Walking Picture business in the town. However he also ran a more upmarket studio and was highly regarded as a portrait photographer. I assume the exhibition will concentrate on this aspect of his work.

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12200941057?profile=originalAn Australian national radio show recently interviewed John Wood (Aston University, Birmingham) and Sally Hoban (Art Historian, UK) on the early history of photography. This involved using poisonous cyanide leaving traces around fern leaves, as well as letters revealing rivalry and bribes. The full transcript of the programme can be read below, or you can listen to it using the link here.

Transcript

Robyn Williams: Photography, was invented as a chemical process by Fox Talbot and Louis Daguerre in the 1830s. Or was it?

Now we've reached a turning point in the history of photography as film retreats and even Kodak goes wobbly, threatening to go to black. Could the history of photography go back even further than we imagined? Here are intrepid researchers Jon Wood and Sally Hoban at the Museum of Photography in Bradford, Yorkshire.

Jon Wood: That is the conventional history of the vast majority of people, they believe that Louis Daguerre, a Frenchman, invented a process that captured what was similar to a Polaroid. It was a single shot on a piece of silvered metal. After that it was William Henry Fox Talbot who was the first person to develop a process that we used throughout the 20th century, that of creating a negative from which many copies could be made afterwards.

However, like all scientific inventions, the science is based on previous experiments. Some experiments were actually carried out earlier than this by a man named Tom Wedgwood. Tom Wedgwood and his friend Humphry Davy wrote a report for the Royal Institution, and in this, in 1802, just three years before Tom died, they wrote about the scientific experiments in photography that Tom Wedgwood had been making. They weren't fully successful because he couldn't fix his images, his images always disappeared, but at the same time it was a very, very important step forward in the field of photography.

However, it is not the only part of the story that we have in regard to the invention of photography. Something was happening amongst that a wider community of people known as the Lunar Society.

Robyn Williams: This is the aristocracy of science, isn't it, Sally?

Sally Hoban: It is indeed. What was happening in Birmingham in the late 18th and early 19th century through James Watt the great engineer, Erasmus Darwin the scientist, Josiah Wedgwood the potter…

Robyn Williams: That's Charles Darwin's grandad.

Sally Hoban: It is, and he had some of the ideas about evolution before Charles actually published in the 19th century, and it was a really fertile environment at the Soho Manufactury in Birmingham, this was a Matthew Boulton's empire, it was this huge factory, and Matthew Boulton was a very, very clever man and he was very well connected. So between all of them, these artists, these scientists, these philosophers, these doctors, if there had been anything interesting happening in the community, in the artistic community or the scientific community, they would have known about it. So there is some very interesting evidence pointing to the fact that these early experiments in photography were known about by the Lunar men and that they may well have been joining in with them and actually trying to pioneer photographs themselves.

Robyn Williams: And this is decades before Fox Talbot.

Sally Hoban: It is, very much so, this is going right back to the late 18th century, so perhaps 1780 onwards. But I originally came across a reference to these mysterious early photographs about 20 years ago when I was an undergraduate student in a magazine, left it alone, thought at some point in time that looks really interesting, I'm going to come back and do a research project on that, and that's how we ended up doing this.

Robyn Williams: Jon, any sign of these early photographs?

Jon Wood: No, the Science Museum in London has records of the pictures that were given to Mr Smith that were on paper, but also submitted to Mr Smith by a gentleman who worked for Mr Piers Watt Boulton were two pictures on silver plate. These are the two that the Photographic Society and Mr Matthew Piers Watt Boulton said, well, yes they're photographs. The issue then was finding out how old these photographs were, whether they were daguerreotypes or whether they preceded Louis Daguerre and in fact, according to the evidence that people were suggesting, even preceded Joseph Niépce.

Robyn Williams: How amazing. Who was the woman in the story Sally?

Sally Hoban: A lady, she was quite elderly at the time that this story broke in Victorian England, called Elizabeth Stockdale Wilkinson, and she was Matthew Piers Watt Boulton's aunt. What's interesting in the archival evidence that we've found in these letters at the Science Museum is that she was actually making early photographic experiments alongside whatever the Lunar men were doing, and this is something that we don't really think about in the history of photography or the history of art and design as well because the women's contribution has been very much neglected. So it was a delight to find that actually it might well have been a lady who was doing these early photographic experiments.

We have evidence to suggest that in 1825, a letter, that she was actually producing images, photographing ferns, and this became quite common in the 1840s. Fox Talbot then picked up this idea. But it would have these very tantalising, a very intriguing references in these letters, so what we need to do now is go on further with the research and actually try and find where these images are. It's possible that they could be in a provincial museum somewhere, just catalogued as 'image of fern' with no name on them. So that would be a further stage in the research, actually trying to find where these images are, now that we know that they actually exist.

Robyn Williams: What a wonderful story. Jon, I don't know whether I'm testing your knowledge of this field even further back than it might go, but before photography, we're talking about photography as a chemical event, you know, using silver plates, there was the camera obscura and there was a way of having an image on the back of a screen that was in fact through a little hole. How did that work?

Jon Wood: Yes, what would happen is that the word 'camera obscura', when you look to the original meanings of these words, actually means 'dark chamber' or 'dark room', so what you would have is you would have, for instance, a tent, and in that tent you would have a lens attached, and on that would be reflected a scene that was outside. While these things could be erected as tents, you could also have them as something that would resemble a box, may be a large shoebox, in which case one of two things could happen. A camera obscura could actually be used to be able to see an image and then draw the image because the image would be seen through a lens, reflected down and you would be able to practically trace the image. However, you would also be able to insert a prepared piece of paper, chemically prepared, so that it would be able to, when exposed to the light, capture the differences between light and dark and any sort of even mildly photosensitive chemical would be able to show where the light and where the dark was, and you would have what essentially could be a photograph.

Robyn Williams: A sort of photograph without actually having the film. Let me take you around the corner to where there is a sort of display, and here is a setup where you've got a studio with some of the original people taking a picture, if you like, of how you had to sit there for minutes on end.

Sally Hoban: That's quite interesting because we have this image of Victorian people as being very upright and very stiff and being very formal, and we have to ask ourselves sometimes to what extent were they really like that, or to what extent was it that they were made to sit like that for their photographs. And this isn't actually too bad because there were actually contraptions, metal contraptions, they look like torture instruments, that the photographers used to put around people to keep their neck in place and to keep their back in place. So they would be pinned in like that because the exposure times were so long, so he actually got off quite likely I think there.

Robyn Williams: And the man with the hat, Talbot, 1839, after discovering his process for making photographic drawings, Talbot turned his attention to other matters.

Sally Hoban: That's very interesting as well because it was photogenic drawings that we think Elizabeth Stockdale Wilkinson was producing at Soho, these images of the ferns, and she is actually referred to as actually doing this in some of the literature and the letters that we have looked at as part of our research. So she was doing it very early on, and then the process was probably developed by Talbot. But because all these artists and intellectuals were working in this very close-knit community, we think this is one of the reasons why these processes were happening all at the same time, because they were sharing ideas and they were sharing their enthusiasms essentially for what they were trying to do.

Jon Wood: Indeed, one of the letters that refers to Miss Wilkinson creating fern pictures refers to the chemical fixing process that she used which involved cyanide, according to one of the letters by a man named Amos Beardsley who sent to Mr Smith three of these fern images. Cyanide is very, very poisonous, but it is one of the chemical processes that is involved in creating what are referred to as cyanotypes. Cyanotypes typically are kind of a blue picture. The female photographer Anna Atkins from the Victorian period was very prolific in creating wonderful pictures, specifically of algae. She actually spent ten years creating volumes of algae pictures, and they are typical Prussian blue, we would refer to it as, you'll see, it's a very, very vibrant blue. But it could also be stained using things like tea to make them a different colour, it's quite remarkable.

But essentially if you laid a fern down on the paper and exposed the paper to light, then what happens is chemically (and here's the science) it goes from iron(III) to iron(II) but involves a process of using cyanide and it creates very permanent pictures that are created by Prussian blue dye. And where the light wasn't exposed, for instance by a fern that was placed on the page, then you get a white outline of where it was. Very, very simple photography, but Miss Wilkinson was creating these type of images in using cyanide and using ferns well before any of the other people were using it.

Robyn Williams: You mentioned Smith and the cover-up. Do you think there was actually a cover-up to obscure all this?

Jon Wood: There were many people who referred to a suppression by a whole bunch of different people, one of which came via the artist William Beechey. William Beechey went to paint the portrait of Matthew Boulton. Matthew Boulton in 1799 had his image recorded. At this time Beechey was worried about the sun pictures that he'd heard of being created at Soho, so he goes and gets a petition from all the artists saying, well, this will put us out of business, and at a certain stage the government are prepared to pay Mr Francis Edgington £20 a year to stop what he was doing. He says this will shut down all the portrait shops.

Sally Hoban: There are in Mr Edward Price's letters to Mr Smith...there are repeated references where he says things like, 'I think I have bothered somebody by bringing this matter to the public.' So it's very, very intriguing, that sort of suppression. And there's a whole air of mystery around the history of photography now based in Birmingham and based on what was happening at Soho.

Robyn Williams: What a story, and here in the Museum of Photography in Bradford, upstairs we've got the first videotape and video machine. Who knows, Sally, is it possible that you'll have somewhere, the photographs that you're looking for, up here in this very building?

Sally Hoban: It would be amazing one day if that would be so, yes.

Robyn Williams: And you're going to have a look.

Sally Hoban: Absolutely. We started this now, we'd like to take it further, get some research funding for it, make it a more formal project. So hopefully we can re-write perhaps the very, very early history of these early photographic experiments.

Robyn Williams: Wouldn't that be exciting! Sally Hoban at the Media Museum in Bradford, where they keep the oldest negative. And Jon Wood from the Aston University in Birmingham.


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Go EAST, young man!

12200936490?profile=originalNot as far as China, but the new Stratford City will do!

An exceptional collection of imagery capturing the spirit of East London, collated from the archival collections of Getty Images, will be exhibited at the Getty Images Gallery at Westfield Stratford City.

Key works on display, which are also available for purchase, include images from the legendary Picture Post magazine, The Pool of London, and Whitechapel’s Jews and Cockneys’ Own Party. An exceptional piece includes a 1912 image of barefoot children waiting in Salmon’s Lane for a free meal. Getty Images’ Hulton Archive printed this from the original glass plate, despite it being damaged, to give a fascinating illustration of East London exactly 100 years ago.

The images were collated from the archival collections in online imagery, print files and contact sheets. Getty Images darkrooms worked from original glass plate negatives through to contemporary film, hand printing and hand retouching each print.

Simply entitled 'East', details of the exhibition can be found here.


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12200932886?profile=originalOn the occasion of Szathmari’s birth bicentennial (1812-2012), the “G. Oprescu” Institute of Art History takes great pleasure in inviting you to the Szathmari, Pioneer Photographer and his Illustrious Contemporaries conference to be held on 14-16 May, 2012, at the Romanian Academy, Bucharest, Romania.

Conference Objective and Goals

The three-day conference will present the results of new, unpublished research on Szathmari’s work and in works by other outstanding photographers of his time. The proceedings of the conference will be published in a book.

 

Conference Themes

- Carol Popp de Szathmari (1812-1887), his life and his work

- Outstading European photographers in mid and late 19th century

- Szathmari and his contemporaries (statesmen, painters, writers, journalists)

- Szathmari’s albums and pictures in state and private collections outside Romania

- Scientific investigation into Szathmari’s photographs

- Conservation and preservation issues related to Szathmari’s plates and prints

 

We have the pleasure to announce that our keynote lecturer is Prof. Larry J. Schaaf, an independent photo-historian based in Baltimore, USA, and an expert on the invention and early history of photography. Dr. Schaaf is the author of numerous book.  He was the 2005 Slade Professor of Fine Art at Oxford University and is the founder and Editor of the online Correspondence of William Henry Fox Talbot.

 Related Events

Conference participants will enjoy the unique and unprecedented opportunity to view a selection of the most important pictures by Szathmari in the collections of the Library of the Romanian Academy.  The Cotroceni National Museum is organizing a Szathmari retrospective exhibition. One night the participants to the international conference will be the guests of that museum. A guided tour of Bucharest, pointing out the monuments pictured by Szathmari will complete the conference offering the participants a bit of 19th century Romania. The event will close with a gala projection of the documentary movie The Eyewitness (2002, directed by Gabriel Cobasnian, screenplay and starring A-S. Ionescu).

The organizer is providing free accommodation to all participants.    

Procedure

Please send the title and an abstract of your paper (max. 300 words) as well as a curriculum vitae, to the following address: adriansilvan@hotmail.com 

Deadline: 31st March 2012

The papers can be filed in English, French, German, Italian or Romanian but the language used during the conference will be English and Romanian only. Authors of selected papers will be notified by 15 April 2012.  We would highly appreciate if you would be prepared to submit your paper of max. 10.000 words (notes and bibliography included) before 30 April 2012.

 

For further information please contact adriansilvan@hotmail.com

The board of organization:

Adrian-Silvan Ionescu, Alan Griffiths, Ruxanda Beldiman, Cornelia König

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12200940453?profile=originalTo follow-up on their hugely successful coffee-table book, Camera: The History of Photography from Daguerreotype to Digital, George Eastman House is showcasing its own collection of camera technology in a new book that was launched towards the end of last year. It celebrates 500 groundbreaking cameras from the museum's collection that forever changed our perception of the world and of ourselves.

Todd Gustavson, curator of technology at the George Eastman House, organises the cameras into genealogical categories, from detective to digital, stereo to sub-miniature. Alongside the 35mm, you'll see curiosities like stereoscopic cameras, postcard cameras and spy cameras hidden in watches, buttons and fountain pens. Essays by experts in the field, including Robert Shanebrook, Martin Scott and Mark Osterman, trace the technological development of the camera and provide insight into the innovators behind the lens.

Entitled "500 Cameras: 170 Years of Photographic Innovation", you can pick up a copy using the Amazon link on the right.

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12200936256?profile=originalThe Museum of Modern Art is currently accepting applications for its Beaumont and Nancy Newhall Curatorial Fellowship.  This is a full-time, three year grant funded position.  The Museum began to collect photographs in 1930 and established the department in 1940; its holdings of more than 25,000 works dating from approximately 1840 to the present constitute one of the most important collections of photography in the world. As diverse as photography itself, the collection includes work not only by artists, but also by journalists, scientists, entrepreneurs, and amateurs.

The Newhall Fellow will assist the department’s senior curatorial staff in all areas of their responsibilities with specific additional responsibilities as follows:

- Performs administrative tasks in the context of curatorial functions including acquisition procedures, collections records, research for exhibitions and publications, departmental committees, loans, and general curatorial inquiries.

- Performs exhibition support functions, including general research, checklist maintenance, assistance with loans, catalogue preparation, wall labels, liaise with other areas of the museum such as exhibitions, conservation, publications, graphic design, framing, etc.

- Performs work in relation to the care of the collections in gallery, study center, and storage areas.

- Conducts collection gallery inspections and assists in follow-up arrangements in the event of damage, deterioration, etc.  Answers inquiries and conducts some gallery tours as necessary for visitors, etc.

- Researches and catalogues the Museum Collection and Archives under senior staff supervision and answers related inquiries from the public and scholars with regard to such information.

- Assists in the administration of artists’ viewing program and the departmental study centers.

Qualified candidates must possess a Master’s degree in Art History, ABD candidates preferred, with a focus on the history of photography preferred and 2 years’ relevant museum experience or equivalent. Candidates must also be conversant with modern and contemporary art and the history of photography.  Excellent writing, research, and organizational skills are also required. We seek individuals who are highly motivated, pay strict attention to detail, have excellent computer skills, and will bring a high level of enthusiasm to work with a curatorial team.  Candidates should also have the ability to manage more than one project at a time and to consistently meet deadlines.  Knowledge of one foreign language preferred.

Please submit resume and cover letter, which must include salary requirements, to jobs@moma.org.  Please reference the position title in the subject line. Further details can also be found here.

The Museum of Modern Art is an equal opportunity employer and considers all candidates for employment regardless of race, color, sex, age, national origin, creed, disability, marital status, sexual orientation or political affiliation.

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12200934884?profile=originalA photo album containing 58 albumen prints of Cambridge University taken for William Winfield, circa 1870, was recently acquired by Kimberly Blaker, owner and president of New Boston Fine and Rare Books, at auction. If you can identify any of the colleges, buildings, and landscapes in these photographs that have not been identified, please feel free to contact them (info@NewBostonFineandRareBooks.com). 

The photos can be viewed here, or the entire album can be bought from them here.

Photo: Cambridge University, Bridge of Sighs, St. John

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