Hannavy_RT72353_C000v1.indd
540 adapt to suit the artistic or creative requirements of the photograph. One of the fi rst to put this new approach into prac- ...
541 and Principal at the University of St Andrews from 1859 until his death in 1868. In 1838 he was awarded the Royal Society’s ...
542 vocation. During this period he met professor Alfred Donné, whom he followed to the Medical school and attended microscopy c ...
543 FOWKE, FRANCIS (1823–1865) Captain Francis Fowke, RE, was a captain in the Royal Engineers, but is primarily remembered as a ...
544 Perhaps Fox’s most signifi cant contribution to art was his systematic study of trees published as: The Anatomy of Foliage. ...
545 white on a dark background. Nevertheless Niépce wrote, underlining his faith in his research that, “something could be chang ...
546 most scholars. The clear metallic plate succeeded in reproducing every detail. Enhancing both the main and unwanted details ...
547 association did not last more than six or seven months. Its publication La Lumière—fi rst issued on February 9th, 1851—playe ...
548 Bayard—to make the fi rst photographic inventory. La Mission héliographique was born within the Société héliographique; the ...
549 as was the need to reproduce faithfully, if not the colors, then at least the tones. Indeed if the collodion glass nega- tiv ...
550 tography. Within the Station physiologique he opened in Auteuil he designed not only a photographic process (based fi rst on ...
551 Carnavalet as early as 1898, at that time purchasing them for documentary purposes. Atget’s photographs reveal an old Paris ...
552 Palace in Paris, containing decorative art, ceramics, weapons, goldsmith’s, tapestry and, among others, the Nieuwerkerke’s c ...
553 Volunteer, c. 1871, appears to show Rejlander twice in the same scene at the same moment—a trick that would come into a cert ...
554 Science in Context, edited by Bernard Lightman, Chicago: University of Chicago, 1997, 378–408. Woodbury, Walter, “Photograph ...
555 the Academy of Fine Arts and trained in the atelier of Ingres. When Ingres took up his post at the French Academy in Rome, F ...
556 work on polarisation. Fresnel discovered what was later called circularly polarised light. No hypothesis led to the experime ...
557 his son, Victor, for the production of continuous tone photographs, in 1893. To achieve this, the removal of the unhardened ...
558 Became William Friese-Greene after marriage to Vic- toria Mariana Helena Friese in 1874. Apprenticed to photographer Maurice ...
559 its capacity to produce multiple high-quality prints, despite the logistical problems posed by the elaborate equipment and t ...
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