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12201062301?profile=originalFrom 22 June 2017 until the end of August, the Atwater Library,1200 Avenue Atwater, Westmount,Quebec will host an exhibition of  Edward McCann's private collection of G W Wilson photographs. McCann is the  former Curator of the Royal Canadian Police Museum and volunteer curator of the library. For 188 years, the Atwater was known as the Mechanics' Institute of Montreal. Mr Wilson and his then partner Mr Hay, won a medal at the Aberdeen Mechanics' Institute in December,1853, so it seems an appropriate venue to revisit GW WIlson's best work.

The title of the exhibition is "The Artistic Mr Wilson." Attached is an image of the interior of Fingal's Cave that McCann considers one of Mr Wilson's masterpieces. It's an album format print -- 3 1/4x 4 1/4 -- a true half stereo negative size, in an early album of ten views of Staffa and Iona entitled "Photographs of Scottish Scenery by G. W. Wilson." nd P1050430.JPG

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12201049075?profile=originalThis major international conference was convened by Geraldine Johnson (University of Oxford), Deborah Schultz (Regent's University London), and Costanza Caraffa (Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz—Max-Planck-Institut). It is the sixth in the Photo Archives conference series. This conference took place on April 20–21, 2017.

The conference investigated photographs and photographic archives in relation to notions of place. In this context, place was used to explore both the physical location of a photograph or archive, as well as the place of photography as a discursive practice with regard to its value or significance as a method of viewing and conceiving the world. Photographs are mobile objects that can change their location over time, transported to diverse commercial, artistic, social, academic and scientific locations. The photograph’s physical location thus has an impact upon its value, function and significance; these topics were explored at the conference through a range of archives and across disciplines. How might the mobility of photographs open up thinking about archives and, in turn, classificatory structures in disciplines such as Art History, Archaeology and Anthropology, or in the Sciences? The conference also addressed questions of digital space, which renders the image more readily accessible, but complicates issues relating to location. What is the place, or value, of the photographic archive in the digital age?

It was sponsored by the Kress Foundation, the John Fell Fund and the History Faculty's Sanderson Fund at the University of Oxford, and Christ Church, Oxford.

A series of podcasts from the conference is available here: http://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/series/photo-archives-vi-place-photography

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12201048668?profile=originalDrop by the Wellcome Collection and create your own camera-less photo. Use everyday equipment and objects for a modern twist on a traditional imaging process, inspired by our exhibitions ‘Electricity’ and ‘Making Nature’. Led by photographic artist Elaine Duigenan, discover the technique of making a cyanotype image to create your own nature blueprint or photogram.

These workshops are for young people aged 14-19. There are 20 spaces in each session - first come, first served. You’ll have the best chance of getting a space if you turn up 15 minutes before the start of the session. Each session will last one hour, and you’ll be able to stay on for the following one if there isn’t a waiting list.

The event is free. 

See more here: https://wellcomecollection.org/events/saturday-studio-alternative-photography?utm_campaign=764640_What%27s%20On%20in%20June&utm_medium=email&utm_source=dotmailer&dm_i=2PXJ,GE00,4NYE9V,1P80I,1

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12201047091?profile=originalOnly four years after the invention of photography was announced to the world in 1839, two Scots were producing works of breath-taking skill in extraordinary quantities. The current Scottish National Portrait Gallery exhibition A Perfect Chemistry demonstrates the uniquely productive and influential partnership of David Octavius Hill and Robert Adamson. In her talk Anne Lyden, International Photography Curator at the National Galleries of Scotland, will explore their relationship, their work and the memorable images they produced.

Book tickets here: https://www.nationalgalleries.org/event/perfect-chemistry-hill-and-adamson

A Perfect Chemistry | Hill and Adamson
Scottish National Gallery
Hawthornden Lecture Theatre
Tuesday 13 June, 6:30-8:30pm

£12 for Gallery Friends - On sale Thursday 1 June at 10am

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PhotoLondon 2017 a record success

12201057253?profile=originalThe third edition of Photo London which closed on Sunday 21 May 2017, saw a record 38,000 number of visitors and sales, including major acquisitions by international institutions and significant sales to private collectors. The Fair brought together 89 galleries from 16 countries. Photo London is supported for the second consecutive year by main sponsor Pictet Group, continuing a shared commitment to artistic excellence.

To its established mix of returning galleries, Photo London added several new additions including leading contemporary galleries Victoria Miro, Sprüth Magers and Alison Jacques Gallery. This year’s Fair also featured an expanded 'Discovery' section – a showcase for emerging galleries, publishers and artists, curated for the first time by Art Consultant and Curator Tristan Lund.

The Public Programme was also a strong draw for visitors with highlights including: a presentation of work (Image Atlas) by 2017 Master of Photography Taryn Simon; David Hurn’s Swaps exhibition to celebrate the 70th anniversary of Magnum Photos; and the virtual reality artwork Thresholds by Mat Collishaw, which restages Fox Talbot's pioneering 1839 exhibition of photography and continues at Somerset House until 11 June. Photo London’s pavilion commissions continued this year and included a special mural by legendary photographer William Klein together monumental photographic installations by Korean artists Bae Bien-U and Noh Suntag. The Fair also featured a special presentation of Isaac Julien’s award winning Looking For Langston which continues at Somerset House until 29 May.
Several initiatives were also launched at this year’s Fair including two awards – the Photo London Artproof Award and the Book Dummy Award – and The Crucible Project supported by the LUMA Foundation, a new virtual space for the exploration of photography that will take place throughout the year at a series of venues across the City. Michael G. Wilson OBE, major patron and photography collector, was also named Honorary President of Photo London, meaning he will play a key role in the selection of next year’s Master of Photography.

Michael Benson and Fariba Farshad, Founding Directors of Photo London, said: “Our third edition has seen Photo London come of age. It is now firmly established as part of the cultural fabric of the City and is a key date in the international artworld calendar – the event that anyone who is seriously interested in the past present and future of photography cannot afford to miss. We were delighted to present such a strong line-up of both new and returning galleries for the third edition of Photo London, as well as an incredible Public Programme with leading artists such as Taryn Simon, Isaac Julien, William Klein and Mat Collishaw, and our Talks Programme, which featured conversations between some of the finest photographers of our generation. The quality of our exhibitors translated into strong sales throughout the Fair and we are happy to report excellent visitor figures. We are looking forward to the fourth edition of Photo London and continuing the Fair’s upward trajectory. There is huge enthusiasm for photography in London and it’s great to know that Photo London is contributing towards the development of London as a key global centre for the medium.

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: “The success of this year’s Photo London shows that our great city is open to creativity, ideas and to people from around the world. I’m delighted that a record number of visitors came to experience the wide variety of exhibitions and events at Photo London, strengthening the capital’s position as a global cultural powerhouse.

Philippe Garner, Chair of the Photo London Curatorial Committee, said: “We believe that Photo London has succeeded in presenting an exciting international overview of the ways in which the medium of photography has been explored in recent years, well punctuated with classic reference points from both the distant and more recent past.

The fourth edition of Photo London will take place from 17-20 (preview 16) May 2018.

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12201059668?profile=originalThe May edition of The London Photograph Fair in Bloomsbury takes place this Sunday, 28th May. A week on from the successful Special Edition boutique event at King's College, the Bloomsbury fair - which has been going since 1982 - offers a wealth of C19th and C20th material, with something for every collector and dealer.

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WHEN:

Sunday 28 May 2017, 10am - 4pm


EXHIBITORS:

Alan Cook, Albumen Gallery, Allsworth Rare Books, Arnaud Delas, Bruno Tartarin, photovintagefrance, Christine Wilhelm, Paul Cordes - Classic Photographics, Diana Howlett, Dr. Jens Mattow - Antiquariat für Buch und Fotografie, Eric P. Waschke FRGS Wayfarers Bookshop, Frédéric HOCH, Hugh Ashley Rayner, Iain Burr, Ian Sumner, Janette Rosing, Joseph Delarue, Linus Carr, Lisa Tao, Malcolm, Pablo Butcher, Pavel Chepyzhov, Philip & Rosemary Banham, Pump Park Vintage Photography, Richard Meara, Roland Belgrave Vintage Photography, Sasportas Fine Art, Shaun Caton, The Front, Tony Crombie.


LOCATION:

Venue: Bloomsbury Holiday Inn, Coram Street, London WC1N 1HT

Tube: Russell Square (1 min walk)
; King's Cross-St. Pancras (7-10 min walk)

FURTHER INFORMATION & TICKETS:

www.photofair.co.uk

[Image above: Francis Frith, Mammoth plate albumen print, 1857. Available to buy at the London Photograph Fair, Bloomsbury, on 28th May 2017]

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12201059253?profile=originalMagnum photographer, David Hurn has donated over 2200 photographs from his own work and those he has swapped with other Magnum photographers to Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales. Hurn is one of Britain’s most influential documentary photographers. Of Welsh descent, he lives and works in Wales. 

His generous gift comprises two parts: approximately 1500 of his own photographs that span his sixty-year career as a documentary photographer; and approximately 700 photographs from his private collection which he has compiled throughout the course of his career.A selection of works from Hurn’s private collection will be on display for the first time at National Museum Cardiff from 30 September 2017, in Swaps: Photographs from the David Hurn Collection of Photography, an exhibition that launches the Museum’s new gallery dedicated to photography.

Hurn has amassed his private collection over the past six decades, predominantly through swapping works with fellow photographers, including many of his Magnum colleagues. In doing so he has assembled a significant and diverse collection that includes leading 20th and 21st century photographers such as Henri Cartier-Bresson, Eve Arnold, Sergio Larrain, Bill Brandt, Martine Franck, Bruce Davidson and Martin Parr, through to emerging photographers such as Bieke Depoorter, Clementine Schneidermann and Diana Markosian.

Over the last two years, Hurn has been selecting photographs from his own archive to create a definitive edit of his life’s work. The collection of approximately 1500 new prints includes work made in Wales, England, Scotland, Ireland, Arizona, California and New York. It includes some of Hurn’s most celebrated photographs, such as Queen Charlotte’s Ball, Barbarella and Grosvenor Square. However, it is his carefully observed photographs of his home country of Wales that are the focus of the collection. Following his generous gift, National Museum Wales is now the institution with the largest holdings of Hurn’s work worldwide.

David Hurn said, “My earliest visual/cultural memories are visiting the museum when I must have been four or five. I remember the naughty statue - Rodin’s ‘The Kiss’ - and cases full of stuff that people had donated. Well now I have the chance to repay, something of mine will be there forever, I feel very privileged.” National Museum Wales’ existing photography collections are uniquely inter-disciplinary and span subjects including Art, Social and Industrial History and the Natural Sciences. Importantly it includes some of the earliest photographs taken in Wales by pioneering photographer John Dillwyn Llewelyn and his family. The addition of Hurn’s gift will transform the Museum’s photography collections and provide exciting opportunities for expanding the collections in new ways.

David Anderson, Director General of Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales: “This exceptional donation by David Hurn will raise the profile of Amgueddfa Cymru - National Museum Wales as an important centre for photography in the UK. We know that photography appeals to our visitors and the exhibition in September launches the Museum’s first ever permanent gallery dedicated to photography. We are extremely grateful to David Hurn for this generous gift, which will drive this important and much needed photography programme for Amgueddfa Cymru, benefiting the people of Wales and those further afield.

The exhibition at National Museum Cardiff follows an earlier presentation of Hurn’s collection at Photo London, the international photography event held annually at Somerset House in London. Curated by Martin Parr and David Hurn, the Photo London exhibition marks the 70th anniversary of Magnum Photos.

Hurn will be speaking about his collection with Martin Parr as part of the Talks Programme at Photo London on Friday 19 May http://photolondon.org/event/david-hurn-in-conversation-with-martin-parr/.

Image: David Hurn,  Outdoor group fitness early in the morning in the retirement Sun City, 1980. © David Hurn/MAGNUM PHOTOS

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12201057881?profile=originalApollo magazine poses the question do UK museums take photography seriously and provides a useful survey of how photography is looked at in the UK, with comment from Martin Barnes, Colin Ford and Michael Pritchard. The question is contextualised around the move of the RPS Collection from Bradford to London. https://www.apollo-magazine.com/do-uk-museums-take-photography-seriously/

Image: Shop sign, rue Geoffroy-St-Hilaire, Paris, (c. 1900), Eugène Atget. © Victoria and Albert Museum

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NMSM: £140,000 and two words

12201052085?profile=originalBradford's Telegraph and Argus newspaper has an interview with Jo Quinton-Tulloch, Director of the National Museum of Science and Media, formerly the National Media Museum, who discusses the process the museum went through to come up with its new name. The exercise took several years, a short-list of 50 alternatives and the use of three consultancy firms.

Read the interview here: http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/news/15283691.Revealed__The_alternative_names_which_were_considered_for_Bradford_s_national_museum/

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12201054085?profile=originalPhotographer and Associate of the Royal Photographic Society, Rose Teanby discusses the origins, background and impact of Robert Howlett’s iconic portrait of Isambard Kingdom Brunel by the launching chains of the SS Great Eastern.

Rose Teanby is a photographer specialising in portraiture and Associate of the Royal Photographic Society. Her portrait of shot putter and strongman Geoff Capes was  acquired by National Portrait Gallery in 2015. She is the biographer of Robert Howlett and has written articles on him for Photo Historian (spring 2016, No. 175) and Royal Photographic Society Journal (January 2017, Volume 157). She featured in the BBC4 documentary Britain in Focus: A Photographic History, speaking about Howlett’s portrait of Brunel and is currently leading a project to restore his grave.

Public booking will open on Friday, 12 May 2017

Book here: http://www.npg.org.uk/whatson/event-root/july/lunchtime-lecture-20072017

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THE LONDON PHOTOGRAPH FAIR - the UK's only established vintage photograph fair - is delighted to announce the return of its Special Edition, to be held on Saturday and Sunday the 20th and 21st of May 2017 at The Great Hall, King’s College London, adjacent to Somerset House.

The boutique event will allow established international dealers specialising in vintage photographs and photo-books to present their own curated displays of their best vintage material.

The London Photograph Fair Special Edition coincides with the closing weekend of Photo London next door at Somerset House.


On display and for sale will be unique and original vintage works from the entire history of photography from the 1840s through the 20th Century. Vintage modern masters from the 1920s will rub shoulders with rare daguerreotypes and original 1960s film and fashion press prints.

Exhibitors bringing a their finest material are: Adnan Sezer - Bruno Tartarin, photovintagefrance - Christophe Lunn, Lunn Galerie - Clement Kauter, Le Plac'Art Photo - Daniella Dangoor - The Front, London - Ian Sumner - Linus Carr - Lisa Tao - Maggs Brothers - Pablo Butcher - Pierre Spake - Richard Meara

Photographs for sale - include works by: Richard Avendon - Norman Parkinson - Paul Strand - Brassai - Man Ray - Cecil Beaton - Roger Fenton - Lewis Carroll - Walker Evans - Bill Brandt - Edward Steichen - among many others.

Tickets are just £5, available from www.photofair.co.uk

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More on T F Hardwich

12201051499?profile=originalBPH recently carried news of new research on Thomas Frederick Hardwich, the photographic chemist and author (see here). In addition, a Wikipedia page has recently been created for Hardwich which adds further information about Hardwich and his career. Both correct errors in earlier publications. 

Image: Thomas Frederick Hardwich, Wellcome Library, London.

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12201048864?profile=originalThe archival impulse, which remains a primary organising principle within contemporary art, is now, in an age of digital imaging and social media, also a mass-cultural phenomenon. These developments, together with a cultural field currently preoccupied with questions of history, remembrance and divergent conceptions of national identity, make an investigation of photography and the archive in Ireland particularly timely.
This one day symposium will bring together researchers and practitioners who are concerned to interrogate the role of the archive in the production of new knowledges about photography in Ireland, and those who offer alternative narratives of Irish culture through a focus on photography. It will provide a forum for the critical examination of a range of photographic and archival practices, within both official and unofficial, public and private contexts. The symposium aims to gather and acknowledge ongoing research in historic, artistic and vernacular photography as it intersects with practical and theoretical considerations of the archive.

 

We invite proposals for 20 minute presentations from researchers working in diverse fields and disciplines, such as: photography; media, visual, material and cultural studies; art history; museology; archival and librarian studies; digital humanities; visual anthropology and sociology; history and geography; architecture; and philosophy and literature.

 

Submitted proposals might address, but are not limited to, the following topics:

 Art and the Archive

The archive and contemporary photographic practices in Ireland

Invented, found and (re) created archives

Ethics, aesthetics and the re-situating of photographs

 

Memory, Affect, Materiality

Photography, commemoration and remembrance

Materiality, affect and vernacular photography

Archives, albums and the production of family histories

 

Identity, Society and Culture

Geographies of representation: borders, space, place, migration and dislocation

Legacies of the colonial, postcolonial and neocolonial in Irish photography

Performing gender in the photographic archive

 

Archival Science: Collecting, Preserving and Cataloging

Museum, library and archive as linked sites of regulation

Institutional agendas and the photographic archive

Systems of classification, processes of collecting and conservation

 

Consuming Archives: Digital Repositories and Databases

Commerce, copyright and online photo banks in Ireland

Digitized photographic archives, networks, communities, users and researchers

Photography, social media and the production of digital identities

 

To propose a paper please send a 350 word abstract (excluding references) no later than

June 16th 2017 to photographyarchivesireland@gmail.com

Proposals should also include the full name and title of the author, current affiliation, full contact details (address, email and phone number), and a brief biographical note.

Dublin Institute of Technology, School of Media

Location: Grangegorman Campus

Convenors:

Ann Curran (Programme Chair, BA Photography, DIT)

Fiona Loughnane (Assistant lecturer, Dept. of Visual Culture, NCAD)

Dr. Orla Fitzpatrick (Librarian, NMI)

https://photographyarchivesireland.wordpress.com/

 

 

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12201055080?profile=originalThe Visual Representations of the Third Plague Pandemic project at CRASSH, University of Cambridge, is delighted to share news of a forthcoming photographic exhibition; ‘Photography, Alterity and Epidemics.’
This exhibition will be graciously hosted by the Royal Anthropological Institute, London, from 11 May until 30 June 2017. Please join us for the opening night, from 5.30pm, at which Visual Plague project researchers will deliver short discussions about the images displayed in this exhibition. 

Based in the Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (CRASSH) at the University of Cambridge, the project Visual Representations of the Third Plague Pandemic has been collecting and analysing photographs of the third plague pandemic, which broke out in 1855 in Southwest China (Yunnan) and raged across the globe until 1959, causing the death of approximately 12 million people. As plague (Yersinia pestis) spread via rats and their fleas from country to country and from continent to continent, it left behind it not only a trail of death and terror, but also a growing visual archive on the first global pandemic to be captured by the photographic lens. Rather than forming a homogeneous or linear visual narrative, photographic depictions of plague varied from place to place, but also within single outbreaks as these were represented by different actors on the ground. Visual representations of the third plague pandemic played a pivotal role in the formation of scientific understandings and public perceptions of infectious disease in the modern era.

The exhibition focuses in particular on three plague outbreaks, of seminal importance both for the social life of the afflicted populations and for the scientific study of plague: the long plague epidemic in British India (1896-1947), the pneumonic plague outbreak in Manchuria (1910-11) and successive plague outbreaks in highland Madagascar (1921-1949).

Like colonial ethnographic photography, epidemic photography is poised between genres, capturing and containing a range of functions: documentary, journalistic and aesthetic. In attempting to document culture and reveal the world through a scientific lens, epidemic imagery also exposed the preoccupations and priorities of imperialism, modernity and colonial scientific culture.  

The exhibition Photography, Alterity and Epidemics examines the role that photography played in pathologising racialised bodies and colonised territories, casting them as potential sources of contagion and catastrophe. The exhibition looks at how ethnographic and anthropological knowledge of “native customs” (hunting practices, burial customs, vernacular architecture, etc.) was integrated into this visual economy and implicated in the spread and maintenance of epidemic disease.

Further details about this exhibition are available here: http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/27238. Any questions can be directed to the project administrator.

 

Visual Representations of the Third Plague Pandemic is an interdisciplinary research project funded by a European Research Council Starting Grant (under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme/ERC grant agreement no 336564. The team consists of Christos Lynteris (PI), Lukas Engelmann, Nicholas Evans and Branwyn Poleykett.

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12201056885?profile=originalThe Curator: Talks & Events post sits within the Programming team at The Photographers’ Gallery that is comprised of Exhibitions and Education staff. Programming staff are responsible for the planning, development, delivery and evaluation of: exhibitions, projects (residencies, web-based activities, off-site sessions and exhibitions), talks, events, courses and workshops for adult groups; and activities for school groups and young people.

Programmes are currently developed and announced over three distinct seasons of 12-13 weeks in length for exhibitions, with a 4-8 month overview for talks, events, courses and workshops. Budgets are drafted and approved on an annual basis, and refined/reported on a quarterly basis. Off-site tours and on-site talks, events and workshops are also programmed by staff in Development and Bookshop. The majority of on-site events, courses and workshops take place on our flexible Eranda Studio Floor (on the Gallery’s 3rd floor). This space is equipped with a data projector and smaller, linked monitor, as well as amplification and recording facilities, tables for workshops and courses, and seats for up to 100 people. The café space is also available for use outside Gallery opening hours for courses and events.

Post: Curator: Talks & Events Team: Programming Line manager: Head of Education & Projects Salary Banding: £26,000 - £29,000 pro-rata Holidays: 25 days per annum pro-rata Contract: 32 hours per week (variable hours, including regular evening and weekend work) Pension: 4% of salary

See more here: http://thephotographersgallery.org.uk/vacancies

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12201047687?profile=originalThis summer all over Ambleside are displayed the faces of people who were here long before us - people who lived, worked and visited the area 150 years ago. These historic images are reappearing as photographic portraits throughout the town, as part of the Armitt Museum’s summer exhibition, “Still Lives – The Brunskill Collection at the Armitt and Beyond

This collection of fascinating portraits is the work of the Brunskill brothers, who from 1865-1906 ran a photographic studio in Bowness. Almost the complete life’s work of this photographic studio is now held by Ambleside’s Armitt Museum and includes a vast archive of 17,800 photographs on glass plates. The survival of this rare and important collection not only gives an invaluable insight into the Victorian world and its inhabitants, but also into the workings of an early photographic studio.

At the heart of the exhibition is the Armitt Museum where the local families are represented. Here the Mackereths, Braithwates, Bensons, Tysons, Birketts and Hawkriggs take centre stage, as they once did in life:

These are the families most closely associated with the development of the area, the fullers and freeholders whose fortunes rose and fell with those of the woollen industry”, Armitt curator Deborah Walsh said. “This however is an exhibition about community, hosted by the community, and as such it has spilled out through the doors of the Armitt and into the streets of Ambleside.

“The sixty or so portraits to be seen here include the beautiful Miss Midgely, the unsettling Borwick Twins and the defiant Tom Carlisle in the Market Place. On Compston Road there is old Mr Pannington with the face of a man born in the eighteenth century, and sweet little Miss Brown with her soldier doll. Louche Mr Foster with top-hat and tin whistle will take up residence in the Golden Rule, and in the White Lion, the formidable P.C. Greenbank will keep the peace.

“All over Ambleside will be the faces of the people who were here long before us - and of course they will also include that now almost legendary bespectacled, pipe smoking Jack Russell, a truly heroic figure known only as ‘Mr Sedgwick’s dog’”.

However, the exhibition is more than just a rarity for its complete survival and for its value as an important resource for family historians and those interested in photography and social history “It’s also a singularly beautiful and fascinating collection in itself and the portraits, in their quiet austerity, still have the power to fascinate,” Deborah said. “They also have an extraordinary sense of timelessness - the paradox of presence and absence made sharper by the passage of time.”

'Still Lives' is on now and all summer at the Armitt Museum and throughout Ambleside. The Museum in Rydal Road, Ambleside, is open from Tuesday-Saturday 10am-5pm, details at www.armitt.com

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12201046889?profile=originalThis webinar series, funded by The National Endowment for the Humanities<http://www.neh.gov/>, and presented by the Image Permanence Institute is free and open for all to attend. The first three webinars will discuss the various materials and technologies of photographic prints. The next two will teach a methodology and controlled vocabulary for process identification, as well as a demo of how to use Graphics Atlas<http://www.graphicsatlas.org/>. The last one will include an overview of collections care for prints and photographs including proper storage, handling and display methods, and guidelines for the storage environment. Watching the webinars as a series is encouraged but not required. Recordings of the webinars will be made available.

Register here: https://www.imagepermanenceinstitute.org/process-id-webinars

 

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