Color Photography in the 19th Century and Early 20th Century: Sciences, Technologies, Empires
The purpose of this working group is to propel a rising field of research; color photography in the 19th and early 20th century in order to reconfigure, expand, and problematize its role in the history of the discipline and in the historical contexts out of which it emerged. Presentations within this working group center on the material and epistemological connections between color technologies, empires, and visuality, as well as the interdisciplinary ties between photography, other media, and neighboring disciplines.
Please set your timezone at https://www.chstm.org/user
Consortium Respectful Behavior Policy
Participants at Consortium activities will treat each other with respect and consideration to create a collegial, inclusive, and professional environment that is free from any form of discrimination, harassment, or retaliation.
Participants will avoid any inappropriate actions or statements based on individual characteristics such as age, race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, marital status, nationality, political affiliation, ability status, educational background, or any other characteristic protected by law. Disruptive or harassing behavior of any kind will not be tolerated. Harassment includes but is not limited to inappropriate or intimidating behavior and language, unwelcome jokes or comments, unwanted touching or attention, offensive images, photography without permission, and stalking.
Participants may send reports or concerns about violations of this policy to conduct@chstm.org.
Upcoming Meetings
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Tuesday, October 15, 2024 11:00 am to 12:30 pm EDT
19th century experiments in color micrography by Fernand Monpillard with Nicole Liao
My project is interested in the use of new synthetic dyes in the life sciences and how this would have shaped color and photo media in the 19th century. I will be looking at the earliest experiments in color micrography by little known French photographer Fernand Monpillard, who seized upon synthetic color’s chemical and visual properties to visualize biological structures and microscopic organisms. While there was no shortage of atlases featuring micrography in the wake of photography’s invention, Monpillard and zoologist Étienne Rabaud’s Atlas d'histologie normale: Principaux tissus et organes (1900) appears to be the first scientific atlas of its kind to print its photographed specimens in color. I explore how this incorporation of color forces us to reconsider assumptions around “mechanical objectivity” and the active role corporeal relations between viewer and image, between specimen and technology, play in the relay of information. Monpillard’s other unpublished monochrome, bichrome and trichrome prints of parasites, insects, embryos and minerals will also be analyzed in relation to his written articles on the technical art of micrography. Thinking through the material and technical execution of Monpillard’s process, I ask how his visualization of “living” tissues and organisms might have intersected with what Jacques Loeb referred to as “Technology of Living Substance” in the lab wherein man can manipulate living nature to his will.
Biography:
Nicole Liao is currently a PhD student in the Department of Art History at the University of Toronto. Her interests lie at the intersection of the history of photography and film, science and technology studies, and aesthetics. Her dissertation will foreground the importance of colour in theories of evolution and biology as scientist sought to reveal, magnify and animate life processes in the latter half of the 19th century. Prior to pursuing a doctorate, Nicole worked as an artist and designer in the architectural field.
Bibliography:
Allen, Grant. The Colour-Sense in Insects: Its Development and Reaction. London s.n., 1879.
Breidbach, Olaf. “Representation of the Microcosm: The Claim for Objectivity in 19th Century Scientific Microphotography.” Journal of the History of Biology 35, no. 2 (2002): 221–5
Canguilhem, Georges. “The Living and Its Milieu.” Translated by John Savage. Grey Room 3, no. 3 (2001): 7–6.
Donné, Alfred. Cours de microscopie complémentaire des études médicales: anatomie microscopique et physiologie des fluides de l’économie. J.-B. Baillière, 1844. https://wellcomecollection.org/works/nbp87rbk/items?canvas=35
Kennedy, Meegan. “‘Throes and Struggles … Witnessed with Painful Distinctness’: The Oxy-Hydrogen Microscope, Performing Science, and the Projection of the Moving Image.” Victorian Studies 62, no. 1 (2019): 85–118.
Monpillard, Fernand. Appareil de photomicrographie. Paris: Impr. nationale, 1903.
———. Écrans et plaques orthochromatiques. Paris: Impr. nationale, 1907. http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k34120132.
———. Note sur la photographie indirecte des couleurs appliquée à la microphotographie. Paris: Impr. nationale, 1900.
Rabaud, Etienne, and Fernand Monpillard. Atlas d’histologie normale : principaux tissus et organes. Paris: Georges Carré et C. Naud, 1900. http://archive.org/details/atlasdhistologie00raba.
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Tuesday, November 19, 2024 11:00 am to 12:30 pm EST
TBA
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Tuesday, December 17, 2024 11:00 am to 12:30 pm EST
TBA
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Tuesday, January 21, 2025 11:00 am to 12:30 pm EST
TBA
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Tuesday, February 18, 2025 11:00 am to 12:30 pm EST
TBA
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Tuesday, March 18, 2025 11:00 am to 12:30 pm EDT
TBA
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Tuesday, April 15, 2025 11:00 am to 12:30 pm EDT
TBA
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Tuesday, May 20, 2025 11:00 am to 12:30 pm EDT
TBA
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Tuesday, June 17, 2025 11:00 am to 12:30 pm EDT
TBA
Past Meetings
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September 17, 2024
Looking Over the Over Looked - Lesser-known Colour Photography Processes with Janine Freeston
Janine will be sharing a work in progress that focuses knowledge exchange pertaining to lesser-known screen plate processes in particular illustrations of screen plates presented during a 1912 slide lecture that point to the complexities of launching nascent technologies and the importance of further interrogation of how and why some processes forefronted commercial interest and eclipsed others. Along with other researchers, Janine is interested in learning more about new lesser/unknown processes and their unique attributions.
Pre-1914, seeing examples of color photography processes was limited to photographic exhibitions, photographic studio windows or disappointingly photomechanically transposed for very expensive publications which inherently lacked the luminosity of the backlit originals. Much was written in black and white about various processes in the photographic press, but imagining how they looked in comparison to each other was impossible. Consequently, many nuanced nascent solutions were swiftly eclipsed by the more commercially successful competitors. As a result, little is known about many less successful processes and their contributions to the incremental improvements that innovators explored while seeking to achieve simple and economic color photographs. The dissemination of information about early colour photography rested on the enthusiasm of manufacturers’ representatives and amateur photographers’ exhibiting, presenting and demonstrating to camera clubs and reporting in press articles. Unfortunately these events usually confined themselves to one process at a time making comparisons between them impossible. This conundrum was addressed at the First Colour Photography Exhibition in Britain and the subsequent founding of the Society of Colour Photographers who actively circulated examples of members work and feedback from specialists work in the portfolios, leading to the publication of didactic guides and descriptive critiques in the monochrome photographic press leaving readers to try and imagine the ease of production and the fidelity of various processes.
Reference Material
Pénichon, Sylvie. Twentieth Century Colour Photographs: The Complete Guide to Processes, Identification & Preservation. London ; New York: Thames and Hudson Ltd, 2013.
Wall, E. J. History of Three Color Photography. First. Boston, Mass., USA: American Photographic Publishing Company, 1925.
Friedman, Joseph Solomon. History of Colour Photography. 2nd ed. American Photographic Publishing Company, 1945.
König, Dr, E., and E. J. Wall. Natural Colour Photography, with Color Chart, Test-Results, and Diagrams. First. London: Dawbarn and Ward Ltd., 1906.
Rendall, H. E. Colour Photography. First Edition. RPS, 1931.
Utterback, James M. Mastering the Dynamics of Innovation. Boston, Mass: Harvard Business School, 2006.
Sobieszek, Robert A. Color as Form; A History of Colour Photography-Exhibition Catalogue from the International Museum of Photography George Eastman House. George Estman House Rochester New York: George Eastman House, 1982.
Biography
Janine Freeston is an Independent Researcher, writer, practitioner, tutor, lecturer, consultant and co-convener of this CHSTM Working Group. She specializes in early color photography and photographic processes, currently researching the associated technological and litigious aspects of trichromatic technology up to the 1930s. Her completed thesis Colour photography in Britain, 1906-1932: Exhibition, Technology, Commerce and Culture - the Dynamics that Shaped its Emergence, will presently be available. Janine is currently co-authoring an undergraduate study guide to understanding and applying research methods for photography in cultural studies and coordinates annual research symposiums on behalf of the Royal Photographic Society Historical Group with the Senior Lecturer in Photography at Wolverhampton University for academics, writers and collectors at any stage of their research.
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August 20, 2024
Re-discovering the Joly screen process through making art as practice research with
Alan Phelan
The Joly screen process was the first screen plate commercially introduced for colour images. Patented in 1894 and introduced in 1895 by Irish physicist John Joly, the process had a very short life and was out of use within a decade. It did however prove Louis Ducos du Hauron's colour theories in making a full-colour image via a red, green and blue filter, where a striped screen is placed in front of black & white film on exposure and then display. The process was subsumed by the autochrome and largely forgotten and unused subsequently.
Over the past 6 years I have revived the process and used it as part of a series of exhibitions. My approach is far from scientific and far less detailed that the original but I have managed to make these additive photographs using analogue methods (albeit with a digitally produced striped screen). I have remained true to the process and exhibit the film from the camera, not reproductions as I reverse process the sheet film used. The method is precarious using analogue chemistry and the results are unpredictable but stunning when it works. The small photographs function like illuminated miniatures, and demand a different engagement from that of contemporary photography. A parallax effect adds an extra analogue kick where the colour shifts as the RGB screen lines mis-align.
As the process was not much used I have sought to create a new visual history that the process never had a chance to have. This has involved traversing many centuries and media, exploring a wide range of images, themes, and concepts. The difficulty in explaining the process in a digital world has also led me to use the RGB colour palette in a variety of installations, sculptures and interventions.
I will discuss the original process, my version of it and how I have used it in different art contexts. The Joly screen process is lacking serious academic research and I hope my work can help in unlocking some of the barriers that have left the process to dark fade into obscurity.
Reading Material:
* Essay by Joanne Laws in response to the exhibition Red Lines, 2019 at The Dock, Carrick-on Shannon, Ireland
https://alanphelan.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOANNE_LAWS_A_response_to_an_exhibition_Red_Lines_Alan_Phelan_1-min.pdf
* PDF published as a USB card documenting the work with the Dunboyne Flower and Garden Club in making floral Joly screen photographs, 2019-2020
http://www.alanphelan.com/AlanPhelanJOLY2020.21.pdf
* Review of the exhibition Echos toujours plus sourds (echos are always more muted) at the Centre Culturel Irlandais, Paris, 2019 by Gilles Renault for Libération
https://www.liberation.fr/images/2021/01/21/alan-phelan-dans-les-racines-oubliees-de-la-couleur_1818160/
English translation at https://alanphelan.com/associated-texts/echos-toujours-plus-sourds-2021/
Biography
Alan Phelan (born 1968 Dublin, Ireland) received BA, Dublin City University, 1989 and MFA, Rochester Institute of Technology, New York, 1994 on a Fulbright and John F Kennedy Fund scholarships. He worked at the George Eastman House subsequently and obtained a Certificate in Photographic Preservation and Archival Studies. It was there that he first came cross Joly screens as a small Irish connection in the vast collections of George Eastman Museum. He has exhibited Joly screen photographs at Casino Marino Dublin (2024); Molesworth Gallery Dublin (2021 and 2023); PhotoIreland Festival Dublin (2021 and 2022); Centre CultureI Irlandais Paris (2021); Void Derry (2020); Royal Hibernian Academy Dublin (2020); and The Dock Carrick-on-Shannon (2019). His practice that began in photography has extended into many different media and mediums with a focus on interpretation, language, and collaborations with other artists, writers, and curators. His work has recently been concerned with queer counterfactual temporalities, where histories are revised, recovered and reassembled into artworks and scenarios. Other solo exhibitions include: The Hugh Lane Gallery (2016); Oonagh Young Gallery (2015 and 2013); Golden Thread Belfast (2014); The Black Mariah Cork (2011); Irish Museum of Modern Art (2009); and Mother's Tankstation Dublin (2007). Group exhibitions/projects include: Self-Determination; IMMA (2023); MOE Communal (2023); TONE/TOLD/TEXT/TALK (2022-23), TBGS, RHA, DHG, HLG Dublin and Libairie Yvon Lambert Paris; CCA Derry (2021); Garage Rotterdam (2020); EVA International (2016); Bonn Kunstmuseum (2015); Treignac Projet (2014); Bozar Brussels (2013); Feinkost Berlin (2007); The Whitney Museum of American Art (2004).
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July 16, 2024
Peppers Ghost. The Archive & Performance with Bronwyn Lace and Anna Seiderer
How do we begin to look at an image collectively? What are the ways in which a visual archive – entrenched in the heavy histories of colonialism and rendered silent through an extractive approach to photography – can begin to speak? In provoking and surfacing the narratives embedded in these archives, is it music, performance, improvisation and collaboration that can become vital tools for re-reading images in a contemporary way? These are questions Lace and Seiderer continue to ask themselves in their ongoing collaboration as artists, activators and researchers across various spaces and platforms. Using experimental, performative and playful tools for exchange and dialogue between artists and thinkers whose practices are devoted to the material traces of history the two are interested in deepening their artistic and academic reflections on the issues of remediation, analysis and reuse of filmic materials produced in controversial and complex contexts.
Within this process Lace and Seiderer have been invited to engage with a collection of photographs from the Musée départemental Albert-Kahn in Paris. The photographs, which are autochromes – the first photographic process that allowed for the reproduction of colour – were made in Dahomey (now Benin) in 1930 and are part of a larger project, the Archives of the Planet, funded by French banker and philanthropist Albert Kahn (1860-1940). Lace and Seiderer will speak about how the projection of digital versions of these autochromes into a Pepper’s Ghost, a 19th- century theatrical illusion mechanism that makes use of a half-silvered mirror, projection and live performance – became a hugely productive tool for engaging with – through music, dance, drawing, live narration and more – the photographs, that might have remained otherwise silent and inactive in the archive.
The two will share the way in which free spirited, open and collective responses to images through myriad sounds, gestures, and materials can become tools for layering, agitating, rescripting and expanding upon the people, places, landscapes, rituals and knowledge systems represented in the images and films. In engaging the archive in an active, collective, and interdisciplinary manner, new possibilities and tactics are able to emerge. Collapsing and unfolding time through performance becomes a means of destabilising the authority of an image. De-objectifying and dehumanising those present in the image. The act of embracing the incidental and the fragmentary becomes a way of working around the gaps and mistranslations in the historical narratives that accompany these images, pursuing instead the emergent material traces surfaced through the body, the voice, the ensemble. The introduction of language – be it linguistic, musical, or visual – can allow one to give a voice to a silenced image, while the use of physical performance and gesture can challenge, animate and expand upon a frozen or recreated moment.
Bronwyn Lace is a visual and performance artist. Site specificity and responsiveness are central to her practice. Lace’s focus is on the collaborative relationships between art and other fields, including physics, history, museology, philosophy and literature.
In 2016 Lace joined William Kentridge in the founding and animating of the Centre for the Less Good Idea in Johannesburg, South Africa, today Lace is the Centre’s steering force and its international liaison arm. In 2020 Lace co-founded The Zone: a collective that calls for the development of an entirely novel transdisciplinary and deliberative approach to inquiry and curation across the arts and sciences and beyond based in Vienna, Austria. Lace lives and works between Johannesburg and Vienna.
Anna Seiderer is senior lecturer at the Department of Arts at University of Paris 8/Vincennes and researcher at the laboratory Arts of Images and contemporary arts [AIAC/EPHA]. She’s member of the editorial board of the journal Slaveries & Post~Slaveries. She has just
published Traces du dé/colonial dans les collections de musées, avec Margareta von Oswald, Félicity Bodenstein et Damiana Otoiu (eds.), Horizon d’attente, Paris (2024) and curated Moving archives at Villa Medici in the frame of the short residency of Academy of Traces. Together
with Bronwyn Lace, she’s running the seminar Arts|Archives|Performances, questioning the performativity of colonial film and photographic archives.
Reading links
https://lessgoodidea.com/thinking-in-2020-2024#/thinking-in-archives-2022/
https://lessgoodidea.com/how#/may-2023-how-the-peppers-ghost/
https://journals.openedition.org/slaveries/801
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June 18, 2024
Evolution of Conservation Approaches for Autochromes: Insights from Clara von Waldthausen and Luisa Casella
Autochromes present unique challenges due to the specific characteristics of their material composition. Over time, few conservators and conservation scientists have dedicated efforts to understand and address these challenges, resulting in a nuanced evolution of conservation approaches. This discussion explores that research, focusing on the contributions of Clara von Waldthausen and Luisa Casella within this landscape.
Historically, conservation efforts for autochromes targeted issues like rapid light fading and delamination of the image layer. Common practices were limited to replacing cover glasses and rebinding damaged plates. Key figures such as Bertrand Lavédrine, Jean-Paul Gandolfo, and Peter Krause played pivotal roles by conducting historical research and characterizing materials and deterioration mechanisms. Lavédrine's 1991 study on autochrome dyes underscored their low light stability, influencing widely adopted guidelines against their display.
Building on this foundation, Clara and Luisa addressed practical concerns still faced by conservators. Starting in 2001, Clara collaborated with Bertrand Lavédrine to propose an effective consolidation method using solvent vapors, a sea-change moment in the treatment of these objects. In 2007, marking the autochrome's centennial, Luisa explored low-oxygen display methods to enable their safe exhibition. Although both Clara and Luisa’s research is over a decade ago, they remain the latest advances in conservation approaches to these objects.
This presentation will review Clara and Luisa’s research results, which exemplify innovative approaches in navigating the delicate balance between preservation and intervention strategies for these historical artifacts.
Clara C. von Waldthausen (she/her) holds a Master of Arts in Photograph Conservation from the University of Amsterdam. She is lecturer in Photograph Conservation at the University of Amsterdam where she established the program in 2015. Clara also works in private practice at her Foto Restauratie Atelier VOF. There she works with museums and archives, giving advice, teaching workshops and performing condition surveys and conservation treatments. (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Luisa Casella (she/ her) trained in Art Conservation at the Instituto Politécnico de Tomar in Portugal. She was an Advanced Residency Program in Photograph Conservation Fellow at George Eastman House/ Image Permanence Institute, and a Research Scholar in Photograph Conservation at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. She has held photograph conservator positions at Luis Pavão, Lda., Harry Ransom Center, and West Lake Conservators. (Ithaca, New York, USA).
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May 21, 2024
Caring for early chromogenic film: a methodological approach to understand its use and significance through Portuguese collections by Lénia Oliveira Fernandes
The history of colour photography shifted in the 1930s as the industry began researching the manufacture and use of chromogenic dyes. Transparencies on plastic film with this type of colourants yielded direct positive images, simplifying the process of obtaining, viewing, and reproducing images in full colour. A dynamic visual communication tool, colour slide film was distributed and adopted in many contexts. Over the years, and as other technologies took over, slide film started to make its way into numerous private and public collections worldwide.
Although an estimated 6 million colour slides became part of several Portuguese cultural institutions, little is known about their relationship with the global photographic industry. Collection surveys are taking place to learn more about these objects’ sociocultural context and material characteristics. To this point, it has been possible to ascertain that their use became more common after the 1950s, especially by professional photographers. Specific issues arose across institutions, which further motivate in-depth investigation into their characterization and preservation. The study of colour slide film is being complemented by documenting memories related to their use and attributed values, on both national and international levels.
This presentation will explore the transition of colour photography into chromogenic processes, focusing on early slide film (1930s-1950s) and the challenges presented by these materials. The main focus will be on objects found in Portuguese institutions, studied in the scope of the ongoing PhD project “Chromogenic film: Characterization, conservation and appreciation of case-studies in Portuguese collections” (ref. 2022.13036.BDANA).
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Lénia Oliveira Fernandes is a PhD student at NOVA University Lisbon that is researching colour slide film in Portuguese collections, financed by Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia). She is a photograph conservator whose professional experience is connected to the following institutions: Rijksmuseum, Nederlands Fotomuseum, Historisches Archiv der Stadt Köln, Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft - Berlin, Arquivo e Biblioteca da Madeira, and Image Permanence Institute. She has been a volunteer in several cultural heritage associations, including APOYOnline – Association for Heritage Preservation of the Americas.
Buzit-Tragni, Claire, Corinne Dune, Lene Grinde, and Phillipa Morrison. 2005. “Coatings on Kodachrome and Ektachrome Films.” In Coatings on Photographs : Materials, Techniques, and Conservation, edited by Constance McCabe, 168–79. Washington, D.C.: American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, Photographic Materials Group.
Mervis, Stanley H., and Vivian K. Walworth. 2004. “Color Photography 5-8.” In Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, edited by Jacqueline I. Kroschwitz and Arza Seidel, 5th ed., 19:231–72. Hoboken (NJ): Wiley-Interscience.
Pénichon, Sylvie. 2013. “Dye Coupling (or Chromogenic) Processes.” In Twentieth-Century Color Photographs: Identification and Care, 160–205. Los Angeles (CA): Getty Publications.
Shanebrook, Robert L. 2016. Making Kodak Film: The Illustrated Story of State-of-the Art Photographic Film Manufacturing. Expanded second edition. Rochester (NY): Robert L. Shanebrook.
Vernallis, Kayley. 1999. “The Loss of Meaning in Faded Color Photographs.” Journal of the American Institute for Conservation 38 (3): 459–76.
Vicente, Filipa Lowndes. 2018. “A obra fotográfica de Helena Corrêa de Barros acordou.” News. PÚBLICO. December 2, 2018. https://www.publico.pt/2018/12/02/culturaipsilon/noticia/obra-adormecida-helena-correa-barros-acordou-1853110.
Wilhelm, Henry. 1993. The Permanence and Care of Color Photographs: Traditional and Digital Color Prints, Color Negatives, Slides, and Motion Pictures. 1st edition. Grinnell (IA): Preservation Publishing Company.
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April 16, 2024
"Unidentified color positives in Slovak collections - Research and challenges" by Kitti Baráthová
The main purpose of the presentation is to introduce my doctoral research on different color positive processes on transparent supports regarding Slovak collections. The focus is on additive and subtractive color techniques on various bases, such as glass, cellulose film sheets or film roll. The urgency of this topic lies mainly in the fact that Slovak collections do not have identified and correctly categorised these valuable pieces in their depositories, which can lead to sudden deterioration under wrong storage conditions. Extensive research on this topic is constantly carried out in the world, but publications of international literature are mostly in English and only limited information is accessible in Slovakia, which is not widely available for all. The lack of professional literature and higher education of museum staff are few of the problems I am facing. As a conservator I realised that revision of the collections is necessary, because proper identification is the first step of preventive care, appropriate storage conditions and conservation of these rare color positives is extremely important for their future preservation.
Target audience: Conservators/restorators, archivists, curators, museum studies
Mgr. art. Kitti Baráthová is a photograph conservator based in Slovakia. She is a Department of Restoration and Conservation graduate at the Academy of Fine Arts and Design (AFAD) in Bratislava who specialises in paper and photograph conservation. Since 2019 she has assisted at teaching at the Department of Restoration at AFAD in the Photograph Conservation Studio, lecturing courses such as Historical Photographic Techniques - Theory and Practice. In 2022, she started her PhD studies under the supervision of Associate Professor Mgr. art. Janka Blaško Križanová ArtD. Her research focuses mainly on color photographs on transparent supports. As a PhD student and a private conservator, she actively participates in conferences and workshops and collaborates with institutions on national and international projects. She attended workshops such as the Twentieth-century Photographs - Identification and Care with Sylvie Pénichon (2019, 2022), the Colour Photo & Film Conference in Florence (2022), the Conservation Science, Technology and Industry conference in Bratislava (2023) and the ICOM-CC Triennial Conference in Valencia (2023). Since 2019, Kitti Baráthová and Janka B. Križanová have been working closely with Albertina Museum Wien (Austria) on an ongoing international collaboration Daguerrotype Project, where they survey, conserve, and preserve the vast daguerrotype collection of the museum. In November 2023, they hosted a course within the DITAH Project Autumn School of Photograph Conservation in St. Florian Abbey (Austria) with the European Research Centre for Book and Paper Conservation-Restoration. Her abstract got accepted to the 2024 AIC-Annual Meeting in Salt Lake City, where she will be also presenting her doctoral research within the Photographic Materials session during May 2024.Literature/recommended readings:
• PÉNICHON, Sylvie: Twentieth-Century Color Photographs. The Getty Conservation Institute, Los Angeles, 2013.
• WILHELM, Henry: The Permanence and Care of Color Photographs. Preservation Publishing Company, Iowa, 1993.
• ROHRBACH, John: Color! American Photography Transformed. Amon Carter Museum, University of Texas Press, Austin, 2013.
• LAVÉDRINE, Bertrand – GANDOLFO, Jean-Paul: The Lumiére Autochrome. The Getty Conservation Institute, Los Angeles, 2013.
• LAVÉDRINE, Bertrand: A Guide to the Preventive Conservation of Photographs Collections. The Getty Conservation Institute, Los Angeles, 2003.
• NORRIS, Debra Hess – GUTIERREZ, Jennifer Jae: Issues in the Conservation of Photographs. The Getty Conservation Institute, Los Angeles, 2013.
• HIRSCH, Robert; ERF, Greg: Exploring Color Photography: From Film to Pixels. Elsevier Focal Press, 2011.
• FLUECKIGER, Barbara – HIELSCHLER, Eva – WIETLISBACH, Nadine: Color Mania, The Material of Color in Photography and Film, Lars Müller Publishers, Zurich, 2020.
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March 19, 2024
The International Reach of Lippmann Photography
Lippmann photography aka interferential color photography generates direct positives on glass that are dazzling in brilliance and archival stability but which cannot be transferred unto paper. This exciting technical genesis meant, however, that opportunities for spectators, scientists, and photography aficionados to connect with Lippmann photography hinged on the physical photograph and on the use of projection devices, capable of megascopic projection, and were thus scarce! Also, lithographs and engravings failed to transmit its unique shimmering colors and its “jewel-like” quality. As a result, examining the international reach of Lippmann photography challenges historical studies that focus on the medium’s „circulation and mobility” through print culture, simply because printing a Lippmann plate was a dream, not an option.
This presentation addresses one dreamer’s attempt to “print the unprintable”; German engineer Hans Lehmann whose “one hit wonder” Lippmann print has so far received scant scholarly interest. My talk also investigates how, despite the lack of Lippmann prints, knowledge about the process circulated beyond Paris (where Gabriel Lippmann’s lab was located) through other forms of disclosure. Mapping how Lippmann photography reached Sweden, Argentina, and Russia etc. illuminates the international scholarly networks Lippmann was part of as well as the reception (both aesthetic and scientific) of his work.
Target Audience: Historians of physics, historians of science, French Studies, Global History
Dr. Hanin Hannouch (she/her) is Curator of analog and digital media at the Weltmuseum Wien where she is oversees the photography, film and sound collections and vice-president of the European Society for the History of Photography (ESHPh).
She is the editor of the first volume on interferential color photography "Gabriel Lippmann's Colour Photography: Science, Media, Museums" (Amsterdam University Press, 2022), PhotoResearcher’s special issue „Three-Color Photography around 1900: Technologies, Expeditions, Empires“ (vol.37, 2022), and the open-access journal Cinergie’s special issue titled “Destabilizing Histories: (Re-)appropriation in Photography and Cinema” (2020).
She was postdoctoral researcher at the Ethnologisches Museum - Berlin State Museums and at the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz / Max-Planck-Institut where she investigated the colonial and imperial entanglements of color photography. She earned her PhD summa cum laude from IMT Lucca, Scuola Alti Studi (2017) with a thesis about Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein as art historian. She completed the international Masters in art history and museology (IMKM) at the Ecole du Louvre in Paris and the University of Heidelberg in Germany (2014). She has also earned a previous Masters (2012) and a Bachelors in European art history, focusing on art in the 20th century, both from Université Saint-Esprit de Kaslik in Lebanon. She is currently writing her monograph titled “Color Photography in Imperial Germany”.
Recommended Readings: Please visit the ressource section in this group for all things Lippmann!
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February 20, 2024
Understanding colors of Dufaycolor
Jan HubičkaDufaycolor was an additive process of color photography introduced in 1932 for motion film and in 1935 for still photography (the same year as Kodachrome). It was the most advanced color screen process, but is under-appreciated today because the dyes in their emulsion tend to fade. In a previous talk I discussed the possibility of digital color reconstruction based on high resolution scans of original transparencies (ideally including an infrared channel) which makes it possible to reproduce the original colors.
In order to make the color reconstruction historically authentic, it is necessary to understand details of the process. I will discuss the historical method of printing the Dufaycolor color screen (reseau) and the properties of dyes used to produce it. Since published data are incomplete, imprecise, and often contradicting each other, I implemented a full digital simulator of the process which makes it possible to turn the spectrum of light seen by the camera into the expected response of Dufaycolor film. I discuss lessons learned from the experiment and how that improves our understanding of the accuracy of color recordings.
There are three main goals of our project:
1) We would like to find practical methods of digitizing early color photographs which faithfully and completely reproduce the physical object as it is today.
2) We would like to digitally restore the colors to their appearance at the time of original processing.
3) We would like to adapt modern algorithms for processing RAW camera images to digitally restore the color of the scene to how it would have appeared at the time of capture and based on that understand the color vision of Dufaycolor film.This is joint work with Linda Kimrova (Charles University) and Doug Peterson (DT Heritage) with significant support from the National Geographic Society.
Jan Hubička is following on from his presentation to the group on Tuesday, December 19, 2023 when he spoke on Digitizing Paget, Finlay and Dufaycolor photographs at National Geographic Society. He is an associate professor at the Department of Applied Mathematics, software developer at SUSE LINUX s.r.o. and also a co-founder and a co-director of Šechtl and Voseček Museum of Photography in Tábor, Czech Republic. His interest in early color photography was sparked by Autochromes taken by his great grandfather, Josef Jindřich Šechtl. In 2006 he organized exhibition of early color photographs by Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorsky (first in Europe except for Moscow) for which he made his own tool composing scans of the separation negatives. In 2007 he organized exhibition of (reproductions of) Czech Autochromes which got him into contact with American collector of early color photography, Mark Jacobs. He helped to digitize important part of Mark Jacobs' collection and in 2012 organized exhibition “When the World Turned to Color Early Color Photography from the Mark Jacobs Collection”. Work on regular color screen processes started in 2011 for exhibition of photographs from the American Colony Collection where Mark Jacobs identified negatives for Finlay color process. He also co-organized two international workshops on early color photography, "Legacy of three-color photography" in 2008 and "Space, Color, Motion" in 2013.
Cornwell-Clyne, Adrian. Colour Cinematography. United Kingdom: Champman & Hall, 1951.
https://archive.org/details/in.gov.ignca.15062/page/n303/mode/2up
Thorne Baker, Thomas. The Spicer-Dufay Colour Film Process. The Photographic Journal, March, 1932, 109-117
https://archive.rps.org/archive/volume-72
Bonamico, C., and T. Thorne Baker. "Dyes and Colours in Photography." Journal of the Society of Dyers and Colourists 49, no. 4 (1933): 103-105.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1478-4408.1933.tb01749.x
The Dufaycolor Manual: Of Interest to Advanced Amateurs, Professional Photographers and Printers. United States: Dufaycolor, Incorporated, 1938.
https://filmcolors.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Dufaycolor_Manual_1938_print.pdf
Harrison and Horner. "The Principles of Dufaycolor prinitng" The photographic journal, May 1939, 320-329
https://archive.rps.org/archive/volume-79
Renwick, F. F.. "The Dufaycolour Process" The photographic journal, January 1935, 28-37
https://archive.rps.org/archive/volume-75/734248
Developing a RAW photo "by hand"
https://www.odelama.com/photo/Developing-a-RAW-Photo-by-hand/
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January 16, 2024
Madame Yevonde and the VIVEX process - A talk by Disruptive Print
The work presented here is the result of a collaboration between the National Portrait Gallery and Disruptive Print, then part of the Centre for Print Research at the University of the West of England. The National Portrait Gallery approached us when they were looking for someone who could help them to print colour images taken by Madame Yevonde [1] in the 30s of the last century. Madame Yevonde was the most famous user of the VIVEX process [2] , the photomechanical reproduction process for colour photographs before the second world war in the UK. The VIVEX process was a commercial method and therefore only ill documented. What we know is that the images were taken through red, green, and blue filters on black and white film and then printed by layering pigmented gelatine layers in cyan, magenta, and yellow in top of each other, but how exactly is lost. We will discuss the registration of the three negatives and possible printing methods.
Disruptive Print
Disruptive Print is a collective of 4 printmakers with diverse backgrounds. Susanne Klein and Abigail Trujillo Vazquez are physicists, Elizabete Kozlovska is a conservator and Harrie Fuller a printmaker. Our research interests are old, partly forgotten, printing methods and how to
transform them into new, 21 st century, technologies with the aim to make them relevant again. All four of us are practising artists and our work can be seen in national and international print exhibitions.
Recommended Readings:
[1] N. P. Gallery. "Yevonde: A beginner's guide." National Portrait Gallery.
https://www.npg.org.uk/blog/yevonde-a-beginners-guide (accessed 25 of September,
2023).
[2] F. W. Coppin and D. A. Spencer, "Basic Features of the "VIVEX" process," The
Photographic Journal, vol. 88b, Section B: Scientific and Technical Photography, p. 5,
1948.
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December 19, 2023
Digitizing Paget, Finlay and Dufaycolor photographs at National Geographic Society
Jan Hubička
Early color collection of National Geographic Society consists of over 15,000 plates. In 2020, the Society began the Early Color Photography Conservation and Digitization Project. Probably for the first time a large archive of early color photographs has been digitized in resolution high enough to capture the individual color patches of the mosaic color processes. While the archive consists mostly of Autochromes, in this talk I will focus on processes based on color screen filters with periodically repeating color patterns (Paget and Finlay color plates and Dufaycolor). These presented interesting problems for digitization, since the regular color pattern interferes with the Bayer filter in the camera. The high resolution scans also makes it possible to digitally reconstruct original color and geometry. It also motivated further research about manufacture process of these materials, color dyes used and other interesting aspects of these color processes.
This is a joint work with Mark Jacobs, Linda Kimrová (Charles University), Kenzie Klaeser (Digital Transitions), Sara Manco (National Geographic Society), Doug Peterson (Digital Transitions).
Jan Hubička is an associate professor at the Department of Applied Mathematics, software developer at SUSE LINUX s.r.o. and also a co-founder and a co-director of Šechtl and Voseček Museum of Photography in Tábor, Czech Republic. His interest in early color photography was sparkled by Autochromes taken by his great grandfather, Josef Jindřich Šechtl. In 2006 he organized exhibition of early color photographs by Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorsky (first in Europe except for Moscow) for which he made his own tool composing scans of the separation negatives. In 2007 he organized exhibition of (reproductions of) Czech Autochromes which got him into contact with American collector of early color photography, Mark Jacobs. He helped to digitize important part of Mark Jacobs' collection and in 2012 organized exhibition “When the World Turned to Color Early Color Photography from the Mark Jacobs Collection”. Work on regular color screen processes started in 2011 for exhibition of photographs from the American Colony Collection where Mark Jacobs identified negatives for Finlay color process. He also co-orgnized two international workshops on early color photography, "Legacy of three-color phorography" in 2008 and "Space, Color, Motion" in 2013.
Reading
Geoffrey Barker, Jan Hubička, Mark Jacobs, Linda Kimrová, Kendra Meyer, Doug Peterson: Finlay, Thames, Dufay, and Paget color screen process collections: Using digital registration of viewing screens to reveal original color
https://arxiv.org/abs/2211.16076
Jan Hubička, Linda Kimrová, Kenzie Klaeser, Sara Manco, Doug Peterson: Digital analysis of early color photographs taken using regular color screen processes
https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.09631
Group Conveners
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Janine Freeston
Free-lance researcher, cataloger and digitizer of photographic archives, author, consultant, co-curator of photographic exhibitions, tutor and associate lecturer. She specializes in early color photography and photographic processes, currently researching the associated technological and litigious aspects of trichromatic technology up to the 1930s. Her completed thesis Colour photography in Britain, 1906-1932: Exhibition, Technology, Commerce and Culture - the Dynamics that Shaped its Emergence, will shortly be available. Janine is currently co-authoring an undergraduate study guide to understanding and applying research methods for photography in cultural studies and coordinates annual research symposiums on behalf of the Royal Photographic Society Historical Group with Andrew Robinson, Senior Lecturer in Photography at Sheffield Hallam University for academics, writers and collectors at any stage of their research.
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Hanin Hannouch
Dr. Hanin Hannouch (she/her) is Curator for Analog and Digital Media at the Weltmuseum Wien, where she is responsible for the collections of photography, film, and sound. Since November 2022, she has been a member of the advisory board of the European Society for the History of Photography (ESHPh). She is the editor of the first volume on interferential color photography titled "Gabriel Lippmann's Colour Photography: Science, Media, Museums" (Amsterdam University Press, 2022) and has guest-curated the exhibition "Slow Colour Photography" about it at Preus Museum: National Museum of Photography (Norway). Moreover, she is the guest-editor of the journal PhotoResearcher Nr. 37 "Three-Colour Photography around 1900: Technologies, Expeditions, Empires". Dr. Hannouch was a Post-Doc, among others, at the Ethnologisches Museum - Berlin State Museums (Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation) and at the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz / Max-Planck-Institut where she investigated colonial color photography in the 19th and early 20th century. She earned her PhD from IMT Lucca, Scuola Alti Studi (2017) with a dissertation on the history of film and art in the Soviet Union titled "Art History as Janus: Sergei Eisenstein on the Visual Arts," after completing an international Masters degree in art history and museology (IMKM) at the Ecole du Louvre in Paris and the University of Heidelberg in Germany (2014), as well as another Masters (2012) and a Bachelors focusing on European modern art at the Université Saint-Esprit de Kaslik (Lebanon). She speaks Arabic, French, English, German, Italian fluently and continues to learn Russian. Currently, she is writing her monograph on the history of color photography in Imperial Germany, as well as another book on the history of the photography collection at the Weltmuseum Wien.