A gum
bichromate print from Matthew Brandt's Dust series was exhibited in The Poetics of Place: Contemporary Photographs from The Met Collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in New York City, from December 12, 2016 - June 25, 2017.
Gum
Bichromate print made with dust from The Rose Main Reading Room, 58 1/2 x 43 3/4 inches.
Gum
bichromate print, 24 15/16 x 20 7/8 in.
Canadian American artist Jeannie Hutchins is primarily a photographer, yet her most recent work stretches the medium as she experiments with silk, cyanotype, and gum
bichromate prints.
This is a series of gum
bichromate prints created at the Officina Stamperia del Notaio in Tusa, Sicily for a site - specific installation.
Not exact matches
He currently works with both
print and book forms using charcoal, conte crayon, cyanotype, etching ink, gum
bichromate, liquid light emulsion, lithographic ink, paper, pencil, pigments, silver nitrate, tannic acid, van dyke brown, and wax.
Gum
bichromate over platinum
print.
The opening show was followed in January, 1906, by one of French photographers, including Robert Demachy, Constant Puyo and René Le Bégue, all of whom showed
prints made by the gum
bichromate process.
DAN ESTABROOK has been making contemporary art for over twenty years using a variety of 19th - century photographic techniques, including calotype negatives, salt
prints, gum
bichromate and carbon.
In the first years of the 1900s, several of these artists seceded, or broke away, from the mainstream use of the camera as a tool for mechanical reproduction and embraced a new style that emphasized the role of craftsmanship.Through such labor - intensive processes as platinum, gum -
bichromate, bromoil, and silver gelatin
printing, they created rich, tonally subtle images.
Nearly every photographic process from its origins — daguerreotypes, albumen silver
prints, gelatin silver
prints, gum
bichromates, platinum silver, cyanotypes and even digital archival
prints — are in the collection, making it a keen contribution to the history of the medium itself beyond Albany's city limits.