Sentences with word «calotype»

Then again, Wikipedia says there were processes such as Calotype introduced in 1841, so maybe so... It would be interesting to specify what type of process was used.
Employing Calotype negatives and skillful draftsmanship, Dan Estabrook uses his dreams as source material, making images that defy our understanding of physical existence, and challenging the assumption that photographs are rooted in reality.
Robert Adamson was a Scottish chemist and photographer who is best known for producing 2500 Calotype photographic prints with painter David Octavius Hill.
The selection of work includes examples of calotypes, tintypes, photograms and other unusual, unlikely and untimely processes by featured artists, Marco Breuer, Eric William Carroll, Dan Estabrook, Michael Flomen (watch an example of Michael's video work), Michelle Kloehn, and Chris McCaw.
A thought - provoking mixture of technology and art, the exhibition displays numerous images taken by Fox Talbot and several contemporary photographers who adopted his calotype process.
Calotype», «Tips For Composition In Photography.».
He took up photography in 1843 using the daguerreotype, and later in the mid 1850s, became one of the first French photographers to use the calotype, a technique on paper developed in England by Fox Talbot, and introducing the principle of positive and negative.
Calotype 7 1/2 x 9 1/4 in.
A New and Mysterious Art: Ancient Photographic Methods in Contemporary Art brings together an international cohort utilizing the 19th century photographic techniques of daguerreotype, calotype, camera obscura, and more to produce vibrant and evocative images.
For them, alternative photography represents exposure to the entire spectrum of photographic image making, including daguerreotype, tintype, calotype, and dry plate processes.
An extensive introductory essay traces the aesthetic and technical history of photography as an art form, from the early days of the camera obscura through the invention of the daguerreotype and calotype and into the present digital age.
Two gallery shows, a museum exhibit and a conference are shining a spotlight on preindustrial image - making methods such as daguerreotypes, tintypes, calotypes, salted - paper prints and more — experimental processes that were often difficult to manage and unpredictable in their results.
The exhibition, curated by Jerry Spagnoli, examines the contemporary use of those techniques and includes daguerreotypes by Takashi Arai, Adam Fuss, and Craig Tuffin; Stephen Berkman's albumen prints from wet - collodion negatives; Dan Estabrook's calotypes and salt prints; ambrotypes by Luther Gerlach, Craig Tuffin, and Matthias Olmeta; Vera Lutter's camera obscura photography; Sally Mann's positives; and «photogenic drawings» by France Scully Osterman & Mark Osterman.
New York City — An exhibition of contemporary photographs using 19th - century photographic techniques and processes — daguerreotypes, photogenic drawings, calotypes, ambrotypes, tintypes, and camera obscuras — will be on view at Howard Greenberg Gallery from September 15 — October 29, 2016.
An exhibition of contemporary photographs using 19th - century photographic techniques and processes — daguerreotypes, photogenic drawings, calotypes, ambrotypes, tintypes, and camera obscuras — is currently on view at Howard Greenberg Gallery in New York.
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