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INTRODUCTION


Publications looks at both illustration- and word-
based texts. Word-based publications often focus
primarily on the art and science of photography itself.
Necessary to a comprehensive understanding of the
appeal of photography in the nineteenth century is
that illustration-based publications provided not just
images of foreign lands to people who could not af-
ford to travel, but they created images for discussion,
research, and further review as well. The emergence of
the photographic press served not only as a means of
disseminating information for the practical application
of photography but also for its chemistry, techniques,
processes, and equipment. The photographic press also
functioned as a platform for the publication of criticism
and debate. Through these increasingly widely-read
journals, problems concerning the manipulation of
early processes were often resolved through readers’
letter pages.
Photographers, Inventors, Patrons, and Critics,
the most conventional of the texts’ themes, offer the
reader extended biographies of leading names in the
development of the art and science of photography. The
fi gures located under this section have often contributed
critically to the success and proliferation of photography
internationally; however, this section includes minor
fi gures as well whose involvement were nonetheless
important in the development of photography.
Although there is both an alpha and thematic table
of contents, the entries are sequenced alphabetically,
ensuring that the information contained in these volumes
can be accessed easily by the reader. This encyclopedia
offers a total overview of the history of photography’s
fi rst century. Many of the earliest encyclopedias served
as compilations of photographic history and practice for
the benefi t of the working photographer in pre-Great
War Britain and America, however this encyclopedia
is a comprehensive reference work on photography’s
fi rst century for the benefi t of a growing body of not
just photographic historians, academics, professionals,
and enthusiasts worldwide but students as well. Primary
amongst our requisites for this encyclopedia was that
it be the reference work we would want students and
upcoming scholars to use in researching photographic
history.
A century ago photographic history was the pursuit
just a few. Very few eminent photographers of the day
were interested in the work of their antecedents, a no-
table example being Alvin Langdon Coburn, , who was
fascinated by the work of early Scottish photographers
David Octavius Hill and Robert Adamson, and the
Scottish amateur Dr Thomas Keith. Today however a
much wider body of people—including photographic
historians, nonspecialists, and students—seek to develop
a deeper understanding of photography’s history to

place it within the wider context that this encyclopedia
provides.
Readers can also explore the history of the com-
panies, devices and techniques that were invented,
developed, and marketed by individuals and compa-
nies such as Bausch & Lomb, R & J Beck, Jonathan
Fallowfi eld, Kodak, J Lancaster, Marion & Co, Ross,
Voigtlander, and Alfred Watkins all of which are dis-
cussed in detail in the entries that follow. The breadth
of this encyclopedia’s list of entries reaches not just the
science or art of photography, but also the practicality
of it. For instance, between the announcement of the
daguerreotype and the end of the nineteenth century, the
weight of a camera had been reduced from more than
one hundred pounds to just a few pounds, and the total
equipment a photographer needed to carry on location
had been reduced from enough to fi ll a small carriage
to less than would fi ll a small knapsack. These entries
narrate the progression and evolution of photography
for the historian, constructing a dynamic, fundamental
understanding of photography starting from kitchen-sink
chemistry where each photographer was exclusively
responsible for the manufacture of his or her sensitive
materials, to the beginning of mass manufacturing to-
wards the end of the century. These discussions highlight
the emergence of companies like Kodak and Agfa, which
were already fi rmly established in the industry as the
nineteenth century drew to a close and which would
later dominate the twentieth century.
It has often been said that at the time of the introduc-
tion of the fi rst viable photographic processes, photog-
raphy was a solution in search of a problem. Although
the inventors of the medium were confi dent in their
predictions of the huge potential of photography, none
could have foreseen the range of applications, and the
innumerable approaches and styles that would emerge
before the end of the nineteenth century. Nor could any-
one have foreseen the number of processes that would
be introduced, or predict the success of some and the
failure of others. Those applications, approaches, styles,
and processes, minor as well as major, are explored
and discussed within the pages that follow, as are their
photographic inventors, supporters, and exponents.
This comprehensive text provides researchers with this
material in an easy-to-navigate, meticulously organized
reference work.
This Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-Century Photog-
raphy encompasses the enormous range and depth of
nineteenth century photography, both art and science.
There are many entries on major and minor fi gures
whose achievements have previously been under-re-
ported, providing readers with a much fuller history than
was available hitherto. This is the fi rst comprehensive
reference work to introduce and celebrate these obscure,

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