origin of photography

camera obscura

It’s called this name because it’s about 200 years old , this name comes from the Latin words for ‘dark’ (obscura) and ‘room’ (camera)​

The camera obscura is something where you can perfectly capture the world around you by projecting what’s outside in a dark room, also a power source is not needed. This is not ‘magic’ but useful science, before them was pinhole cameras which had been round for several hundreds of years. But until the early 1600s CE that they were able to make lenses of higher enough quality to create more flexible cameras with bigger openings, this meant that letting in more light to create a brighter and higher quality images. ​

Draughtsman and other painters once used a camera obscura like this for making accurate detailed sketches of scenes such as landscapes or architecture.​

It was useful for capturing perspective, accurately representing the height, width, depth and relative position of what you can see in the 3D world on a 2D flat surface. ​

how dose it work

Above a rather theatrical curtain that surrounds the darkened chamber, there’s a large lens in a wooden panel. This lens focuses the light from the scene outside down into a mirror which is held at a 45degree angle behind it on inside. It reflects rays of light into a piece of paper or canvas, which is laid out flat on the base inside a wooden box.​

To see the image, you need you cover yourself with a piece of black cloth to stop any other surrounding light from getting into the box. And because this uses a lens which creates a relatively big aperture, you get a sharp, colorful image on the the paper, like a mini video feel of the outside world.

who used a camera obscura?

  • Because the light is bouncing off the mirror, you see the image the right way up. But the lens causes the image to flip (or invert) so it’s also the wrong way round.​
  • That meant artists using a camera obscura would have to trace the final image in reverse.​
  • There is plenty of evidence that masters like Canaletto and Rembrandt used the camera obscura — but other artists may have been more secretive.​
  • People still debate whether the Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer used a camera obscura to capture the incredible detail in his exquisite paintings of domestic scenes. Although there’s no written evidence to prove it either way, art historians think, on balance, that he probably did!​

Nicephorus Niepce ​

  • Born on the 7th March 1765 ​
  • Died 5th July 1855, aged 68

 he was a French inventor and one of the earliest pioneers of photography. Niepce developed heliography, a technique he used to create the world’s oldest surviving products of a photographic process. In the mid-1820s, he used a primitive camera to produce the oldest surviving photograph of a real-world scene. Among Niepce’s other inventions was the Pyrophore, one of the world’s first internal combustion engines, which he conceived, created, and developed with his older brother Claude Niepce.

 

his early life

Niepce was born in Chalon-sur-Saône, Saône-et-Loire, where his father was a wealthy lawyer. His older brother Claude (1763–1828) was also his collaborator in research and invention, but died half-mad and destitute in England, having squandered the family wealth in pursuit of non-opportunities for the Pyrophore. Niepce also had a sister and a younger brother, Bernard.​

Nicephore was baptized Joseph but adopted the name Nicephore, in honour of Saint Nicephorus the ninth-century Patriarch of Constantinople, while studying at the Oratorian college in Angers. At the college he learned science and the experimental method, rapidly achieving success and graduating to work as a professor of the college.

His photography

The exact timing of Joseph Nicephorus Niepce’s first photographic experiments is uncertain, but they stemmed from his interest in lithography and the camera obscura. By 1816, Niepce had captured small images on silver chloride-coated paper, though these resulted in negatives and were difficult to fix. Shifting to Bitumen of Judea, a light-sensitive asphalt used in etching, Niepce developed heliography, his method of creating permanent photographic images. In 1822, he made what is considered the first lasting photograph, though it was destroyed later. Surviving photo-etchings from 1825 are among his earliest works. Niepce’s successful camera photograph came between 1822 and 1827 and was rediscovered in 1952. In 1829, he partnered with Louis Daguerre to develop the physautotype, but after Niepce’s death in 1833, Daguerre continued alone, creating the daguerreotype. The French government bought Daguerre’s process, awarding him and Niepce’s estate stipends. Niepce’s contributions were initially overlooked, but he is now recognized as a pioneer of photography. His bitumen process, while impractical for early cameras, was used as an effective photoresist for printing plates well into the 20th century.​

henry fox Talbot

  • He was born in 1800 and passed in 1877 ​

And a graduate of trinity college, Cambridge and was recently elected liberal member of parliament in house of commons, he was a true polymath, his intellectual curiosity embraces the fields of mathematics, chemistry, astronomy and botany ; philosophy and phished ; Egyptology, the classics, and art history. He had published four books and twenty-seven scholarly articles on a variety of subjects and was a fellow of the astronomical, linnean, and royal societies

in January 1834, Talbot returned home to Laycock abbey, an  amalgamation of buildings incorporating the thirteenth- and fourteenth-century remains of a former abbey about eighty-five miles west of London. within only a few mouths he was able to began to experiment with that had occurred to him at lake Como and soon found that a sheet of fine writing paper, which is coated with salt and brushed with a solution add silver nitrate, dark in the sun, and that a second coating of salt impeded further darkening or fading.

louis Daguerre – daguerreotype

exposure times for early daguerreotype ranged from 3 to 15 minutes, but after the improvements to the lenses and the introduction for bromine, which increases the sensitivity of the silver components on the plate, which was possible to make a portrait with an exposure of about 1 minute.

initially, daguerreotype were presented to the sitter in a book like case of embossed paper or leather. the fragile plate was protected by a Cover Glass and was sealed inside a preserver frame and brass mat. later the union case, as it was known, was moulded from a material called thermoplastic.

due to the nature of the process, daguerreotype are made into mirror images of their subjects, as reversed from right to lift. this illusion is hardly noticeable in portraits but quite obvious in urban views or any images containing lettering.

Richard Maddox

An anthropologist, also holds advanced degrees in religious studies and humanities. He has done fieldwork in Mexico, Ecuador, and primarily in Spain. His general interests are in the relation between cultural meanings and practices and the exercise of political and economic power. He is the author of the ethnographic and historical study, El Castillo: The Politics of Tradition in an Andalusian Town, which won the President’s Book Award of the Social Science History Association and the Robert E. Park Award of the Urban and Community Studies Section of the American Sociological Association. More recently, he published a study of state and public culture, The Best of All Possible Islands: Seville’s Universal Exposition, the New Spain, and the New Europe. His current research interests include microhistory, processes of Europeanization and globalization, the cultural politics of European liberalisms, regionalism and nationalism, and the transformation of the countryside in Spain and Europe

  • education – PhD Stanford University 1988

Publications

  • “Euro liberal Pastoralism and Rural Development in Southern Spain,” in Landscape, Heritage, and Conservation (Carolina Academic Press, 2010).
  • “Lived in Hegemonies and Biographical Fragments: Micro steps toward a Counter history of the Spanish Transition from Dictatorship to Democracy,” in Small Worlds: Meaning and Method in Microhistory (The School of American Research Press, 2008).
  • The Best of All Possible Islands: Seville’s Universal Exposition, the New Spain, and the New Europe (State University of New York Press, 2004).
  • “Intimacy and Hegemony in the New Europe,” in Off Stage/On Display: Intimacy and Ethnography in the Age of Public Culture, Andrew Sharrock, ed. (Stanford University Press, 2004).
  • “The Politics of Space and Identity in a Europe without Borders: Cosmopolitan Liberalism, Expo ’92, and Seville,” Irish Journal of Anthropology (1998).
  • “Founding a Convent in Seventeenth Century Spain: Cultural History, Hegemonic Processes and the Historical Subject,” Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice (1998).
  • “Bombs, Bikinis, and the Popes of Rock n’ Roll: Reflections on Resistance, the Play of Subordinations, and Cultural Liberalism in Andalusia and Academia, 1983-1995” in Gupta and Ferguson, eds., Culture, Power, and Place: Explorations in Critical Anthropology (Duke University Press, 1997).
  • “Revolutionary Anticlericalism and Hegemonic Processes in an Andalusian Town, August 1936” American Ethnologist (1995).
  • “Culture, Schooling, and the Politics of Class Identity in an Andalusian Town,” Comparative Education Review (1994).
  • El Castillo: The Politics of Tradition in an Andalusian Town (University of Illinois Press, 1993).

George Eastman

he was a high school dropout, who was judged ” not especially gifted” when he measured against the academic standards of the day, he was poor, however even as a young man, he took it upon him self to support hid widowed mother and two sisters, one of which had polio.

he began his business career as a 14 year old office boy in an insurance company and followed that with work as a clerk in a local bank.

he was George Eastman and his ability is to overcome financial adversity, his gift for organisation and management, and his lively and inventive mind made him successful in entrepreneur by his mid-twenties, and enabled him to direct his Eastman Kodak company to the forefront of American industry.

however building a multinational corporation and emerging as one of the nations most important industries required dedication and sacrifice. it would not come easy.

His Boyhood

The youngest of three children, George Eastman was born to Maria Kilbourn and George Washington Eastman on July 12, 1854 in the village of Waterville, some 20 miles southwest of Utica, in upstate New York. The house on the old Eastman homestead, where his father was born and where George spent his early years, has since been moved to the Genesee Country Museum in Mumford, N.Y., outside of Rochester

When George was five years old, his father moved his family to Rochester. There the elder Eastman devoted his energy to establishing Eastman Commercial College. Then tragedy struck. George’s father died, the college failed and the family became financially distressed.

George continued his schooling until he was 14. Then, he was forced by family circumstances, he had to find a job to help he family. .

His first job, as a messenger boy with an insurance firm, paid $3 a week. One year later, he became office boy for another insurance firm. Through his own initiative, he soon took charge of policy filing and even wrote policies. From this his pay increased to $5 per week.

But, even with that increase, his income was not enough to meet family expenses. so he decided to study accounting at home in the evenings to get a better paying job.

In 1874, after five years in the insurance business, he was hired as a junior clerk at the Rochester Savings Bank. then his salary tripled — to more than $15 a week.

Kodak (brownie)

Digital Photography

1957 – The First Digital Image

Let’s go back to the middle of the 20th century. Photography – on film – is as popular as it has ever been, made incredibly accessible by affordable, portable 35mm SLR and rangefinder cameras. These find their way into the hands of news people and enthusiasts alike – and as far as most are concerned, they do everything photographers need them to.

All the same, some researchers have started to awaken to the possibilities that rapidly evolving digital technologies might have for image-making. In 1951, a team of Ampex Corporation researchers led by Charles Ginsberg invented a contraption that could take live images from a camera and store them as electrical impulses on magnetic tape. It would be sold in 1956, under the catchier and more familiar name of ‘video recorder’.

For the first thing we might think of as a digital photograph, however, we’d have to wait until 1957. At this point in the story, we meet one Russell Kirsch. 

Kirsch was by all accounts a regular all-American guy. He worked a steady job at the National Bureau of Standards, and his wife Joan had a baby on the way. However, Kirsch wasn’t working just any job – he and his colleagues had in 1950 developed the USA’s first operational stored-program computer, known as the Standards Eastern Automatic Computer, or SEAC. 

This computer would be used for all sorts of applications until its last run in 1964, from statistical analysis to meteorology. but, it was Russell Kirsch who first looked at the hulking machine – which back then was considered to be a relatively slimline computer – and had the thought, ‘Gee, y’know, we could probably load a picture into this thing.’ 

Kirsch and the team built their own drum scanner that would allow them to ‘trace variations of intensity over the surfaces of photographs’. With this, they were able to make the first digital scans. One of the first – possibly the very first – was an image of Russell Kirsch’s new-born son, Walden Kirsch.

By modern standards, this image wasn’t much of anything. It measured just 173 pixels on each side and covered an area of 5x5cm. It had a bit depth of one bit per pixel – it could only classify pixels as black or white, so the team made the shades of grey by compositing several scans done at different intensity thresholds. 

Despite its technical limitations, this image would take its place in history. All digital imaging – from security footage to press photography to Uncle Bob’s iPad photos of his niece’s wedding – would follow on from this picture of Walden. It would go on to be honoured by Life magazine in 2003 as one of the “100 photographs that changed the world” – which it most certainly did.

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