PH 111 History of Photography

The History of Photography will explore the photographic medium from the camera obscura (1490) to contemporary digital interfaces within the context of art, culture, and social/political circumstance. This course will address photographic movements and the scientific methods that shaped their development and evolution. This class will consist of a series of lectures, visual presentations, projects, field trips, and discussions.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

QUIZ Images













Class THREE


History of Photography
Week 3 (2011.09.21)
Class Notes.

Other Developments in Print Photography:

Hippolyte Bayard:

Civil servant in the Ministry of Finance established and
Exhibited photogenic drawings and direct positive paper
Images exposed in a camera.



Pros and cons of the Daguerreotype and the Paper pos/neg process:




Daguerreotype

Calotype/Talbotype

Modification to the Calotype/Talbotype with:
(Wax paper negative by Gustave Le Gray)

Next:

Introduction of the Glass Plate and Collodion 1850

By:

Frederick Scott Archer

The Wet Plate Collodion method.




The Albumen Print:


By: Blanquart-Evrard ca: 1850’s

A paper coated with egg white before being sensitized with silver salts.

The albumen coating gave a smoother surface and finer detail than the

calotype and salted papers previously used. The most popular printing

paper until the 1890s

First successful photographic printing plant for standardized printing process.







The Stereograph:

First created by Sir Charles Wheatstone originally used
For viewing drawings.


1859:  Oliver Wendell Holmes developed a compact,
Hand-held viewer and Joseph Bates (of Boston)
Made improvements for mass-production.






Josef Max Petzval and Peter Friedrich Voigtlander’s advancements in optics

and

John Frederick Goddard’s 1840 announcement of new fuming methods
to the development of the plate to decrease exposure time.

Avrage exposures for the daguerreotype were reduced from 20 - 30 min

To

Less than one min.




“…the refuge of failed painters with too little
talent…”


- Charles Baudelaire




Mathew Brady:

Daguerran Miniature Gallery on lower Broadway
1844 to “vindicated true art”

Provided portraits of celebrities to new
Publications:

Frank Leslie’s and Harper’s Weekly
To be translated into illustrations




Albert Sands Southworth
Josiah Hawes

“…nature is not at all to be represented as it is, but as it

ought to be and might possibly have been…”



David Octavius Hill
1802 - 1870
Painter/Artistic Director




Robert Adamson
1821 -1848
Photographer

The signing of the Deed of Demission, resigning their positions and
Livelihoods, and established the Free Church of Scotland.


“The Picture, the execution of which, it is expected will occupy
The greater portion of two or three years, is intended to supply
An authentic commemoration of this great event in the history of
Church.. Will contain Portraits, from actual sittings, in as far as
These can be obtained, of the most venerable fathers, and others
Of the more eminent and distinguished ministers and elders.”

- Hill



Carte-de Visite

Andre Adophe-Eugene Disderi patents the Carte-de-visite system.

8 - 12 lens camera system exposed on one plate with standardized photographic
Sizes mounted on cardstock (2-3/8 x 4-1/4”).


Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Class ONE and TWO Notes


History of Photography PH111
Section A notes from class ONE & TWO


So….. What is history?

his·to·ry     /ˈhɪstəri, ˈhɪstri/
[his-tuh-ree, his-tree]

–noun, plural -ries.

1.the branch of knowledge dealing with past events.

2.     a continuous, systematic narrative of past events as relating to a particular
            people, country, period, person, etc., usually written as a chronological account;
            chronicle: a history of France; a medical history of the patient.

3.the aggregate of past events.

4.            the record of past events and times, esp. in connection with the human race.

5.a past notable for its important, unusual, or interesting events: a ship with a history.

6.            acts, ideas, or events that will or can shape the course of the future; immediate
            but significant happenings: Firsthand observers of our space program see history
            in the making.


Each age tries to form its own conception of the past.  Each age writes the history of the past
anew with reference to the conditions uppermost in it’s own time.

                                                                        - Frederick Jackson Turner


- o r  -



History is fables agreed upon.

                                                                        - Voltaire


Discourse = information exchange how then do we qualify the notion of “exchange”

All communication is, to a greater or lesser extent, tendentious; all messages are manifestations of interest.

…So, are these manifestations imbued within the ‘real world’ ?


The ‘photographic discourse’

A discourse can be defined as an arena of information exchange, that is, as a system of relations between
parties engaged in communicative activity.

Or…

Meaning through a system of codes which definine grammar and syntax.  

Or…

The intelligibility of the photograph is no simple thing; photographs are texts inscribed in terms of what we
May call ‘photographic discourse’, but this discourse, like any other, engages discourses beyond itself, the
‘photographic text’, like any other, is the site of a complex intertextuality, an overlapping series of
Previous texts ‘taken for granted’ at a particular cultural and historical conjuncture.

                                                            -            Victor Burgin



Images & Meaning:

Viewers define meaning based upon the individuals subjective
value system(s).  It is formed through a social process that involves:
           
            The image
            The author
            Viewer interpretation of the image and knowledge of the author
            The context in which the image is viewed
           
So, what about the meaning?




Aesthetics & Taste

Aesthetics:
Philosophy dealing with notions on the beautiful, the ugly,
the sublime, the comic, etc., as applicable to the fine arts, with a
view to establishing the meaning and validity of critical judgments
concerning works of art, and the principles underlying or
justifying such judgments.

Taste:
Informed by class, cultural background, education, and other aspects of identity.
Good taste is often denoted by upper class and educated positions within society/culture.







The Camera Obscura:
Dark Chamber

An apparatus in which the image of external objects, formed by a convex lens or a concave mirror,
are projected on a surface within a darkened chamber/box/room



** Giovanni Battista della Porta (16th Century)

Introduction of a bi-convex lens into the aperture and reflecting mirror




5th Century BC/BCE:

            Mo-Ti formally recorded the creation of an inverted image formed by light rays passing
            through a pinhole into a darkened room.  Mo-Ti called this room a “collecting place”

384 - 322 BC/BCE:

            Aristotle viewed the crescent shape of a partially eclipsed sun projected on the ground
            through the holes in a sieve, and the gaps between leaves of a plane tree

965 -1039 AD/CE:

            Alhazen (Abu Ali al-Hasan lbn al-Haitham) produced a full account of the principles
            including experiments with five lanterns outside a room with a small hole

1490 AD/CE:

            Leonardo Da Vinci established working descriptions of the Camera Obscura in his
            notebooks and the applications the tool would have within art and science



The Camera Lucida (Light Chamber) 1807


 “What is the secret of the invention?  What is the substance endowed with such astonishing sensibility
to the rays of light, that it not only penetrates itself with them, but preserves their impression;
performs at once the function of the eye and the optic nerve - the material instrument of sensation
and sensation itself?”


                                                            - Photogenic Drawing, 1939


Q:  What were some of the cultural and social conditions that allowed for photography
to come into existence?


Early experiments in establishing the photographic process:


Thomas Wedgwood attempted to transfer paintings on glass to
white leather and paper moistened with a solution of
nitrate of silver, describing the resulting negative image as follows:

“where the light is unaltered, the color of the nitrate is deepest.”



Cliché-verre:

A glass plate is covered with ink or paint and a design is drawn through it with a stylus or brush,
producing a negative matrix. A piece of photo-sensitized paper is placed beneath it and it is
exposed to light. A positive, proto-photographic image appears on the paper. It should be noted
that this is a print without printing; there is no ink on the paper.




Joseph-Nicéphore Niépce:

1765 - 1833

Attributed with the discovery of:
Heliography (after the Greek “of the sun”
or “sun drawing”).


And

Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre
à The Diorama!
à And…. That Daguerreian process.

What about:

Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre

&

François Arago:

Eminent astronomer, scientist, and
acting spokesperson for research groups in
physics and chemistry.

Presented Daguerres work to the
Academies of Science and of Fine Arts.

Paris August 19th, 1839


Daguerreotype standard plate sizes…

Whole Plate:                        6-1/2 x 8-1/2”

Half Plate:                        4-1/4 x 5-1/2”

Quarter Plate:                        3-1/4 x 4-1/4”

Sixth Plate:                        2-3/4 x 3-1/4”

Ninth Plate:                        2       x 2-1/2”

Sixteenth Plate:                        1-3/8 x 1-5/8”

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Aquatint:

An aquatint is created by etching sections, rather than lines, of a plate in order to create areas of uniform tone.

An aquatint is prepared by applying resin or a similar ground to a metal plate, which is then heated, thus adhering

 the ground to the metal. This gives a roughness or grain to the plate which adds texture to the image. The plate

is then immersed in an acid bath, which bites or etches the plate and creates areas which will hold the ink. The design

is created with gradations of tone achieved through repeated acid baths combined with varnish used to stop out

areas of lighter tone. Aquatint is an intaglio process, so prints made in this manner will have a platemark. Aquatinting,

 with its areas of tone, was often used to duplicate the feel of a watercolor. Some etching was frequently used in an

aquatint print to create linear elements in the image.

Samuel F. B. Morse and….

The Daguerreotype in America:
- Aesthetics of the mechanical and chemical process of the medium adopted by the social and cultural climate of the "upwardly and spatially mobile" American sosciety

-  A new medium to define unique aspects of American history and experience of the citizenry

-  Method of capture by means of mechanical reproduction.  This process would avoid any artifice inherent within the provincial graphic art throughout mid-century

----------------

The Jackalope:

Dragons Fighting Knights:



and Forget Me Not...


-------

William Henry Fox Talbot

The Calotype:
(the organ of the name is from the Greek ‘Kalos’, meaning beautiful)

A “positive/negative” process credited to
William Henry Fox Talbot in September 1840 and patented in 1841.


The Pencil of Nature, 1844 – 46
* First publication to explain and illustrate the scientific and practical applications of photography.