I 26
INDEX
Great Britain (continued)
government printers, 604
Imperial power, 606
India, 610–611
industrial transformation of, 609
institutions, 1303–1307
International Exhibition of 1862, 610
Kodak cameras, 611–612
new mass amateur, 612
landscape photography, 609
licensed commercial portraitists, 607
material infrastructure, 1303
military in ballooning and photography, 14
military photography, 930–931
Patent Law Amendment Act of 1852, 1054
patents, 1054, 1055
Patents, Designs and Trade Marks Act of
1883, 1054
photographic collections, 68
photographic retailing, 1092–1093
photographic societies, 608, 1303–1307
British societies situated beyond
England’s borders, 1304–1305
journals, 1305
regional, 1304
subjects, 1305
photographic surveys, 612
photographic unions, 1422, 1423
photography collections, national collection
of portraits, 1306
pictorialism, 612
picturesque views, 609
portraits, 609, 611
Royal Collection of photographs, 65
Windsor, 1214–1216
Royal Geographical Society, 1216–1218
Royal Institution, 520
Royal Photographic Society, 1218–1220
Royal Society of London, 1221–1223
oldest scientifi c society, 1221
Sedgefi eld, William Russell, 1261
Smith, Samuel, 1275
social investigation and regulation, 611
Sparling, Marcus, 1329
specialist journals, 608
survey photography, 1306–1307, 1360,
1361–1362
technical innovations, 611–612
trade in views, 609
transition from amateur to professional
photographer, 609
Turner, Benjamin Brecknell, 1411–1412
architectural photography, 1411–1412
rural scenes, 1411–1412
Woodburytypes, 611
Great Exhibition, New York (1853-54),
617–618
daguerreotypes, 617
exhibitions, 617–618
national importance, 617
New York “Crystal Palace,” 617–618
photographers exhibiting, 618
photography, 617
reviews, 617–618
subjects, 617
Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of
All Nations, Crystal Palace, 1851, see
Crystal Palace Exhibition, 1851
Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of
All Nations (Owen, Hugh and Ferrier,
Claude-Marie), 188
Greco-Roman ruins, 18–19, 19
Greece, 618–619
archaeological photography, 619
calotypes, 618
Constantinou, Dimitrios, 335
constant political–social changes, 618
daguerreotypes, 618
fi rst professional photographic studio, 618
Joly de Lotbinière, Pierre-Gustave Gaspard,
618, 779
Moraites, Petros, 937
photographed for fi rst time, 618
portraits, 619
Stillman, William James, 1347, 1348
tourist photography, 618–619
Greene, John Beasly, 619–622, 621
Algeria, 620–621
Egypt, 619–621
trained Egyptologist, 619, 620
incorrect spelling “Beasley,” 621–622
Société française de photographie, founding
member, 620
Greenlaw, Colonel Alexander, 622
India, 622
Greenlaw process, 622
Grief, 1165
Grinnell, George Bird, 355
Griswold, Victor Moreau, 1391
Groll, Andreas, 622–623
architectural photography, 622
biography, 622
historic monuments, 622
Gros, Baron Jean Baptiste-Louis, 623–624
daguerreotypes, 623–624
Société française de photographie, founding
member, 623
Société héliographique, 681
founding member, 623
Grosvenor Gallery, 859
Grotesque, 504
Group pictures, photographic practices, 1092
collective or corporate visual identities,
1092
Group tourism, 59
Grundy, William Morris, 624
albumen prints, 624
rural photography, 624
stereographs, 624
Gsell, Emile, 624, 625
Angkor Vat, 624, 625
Guardia, Julio, 999
Guatemala, 284–285
Gum-bichromate, publications, 186
Gum Ozotypes, 1157
Gum prints, 556, 624–626
adaptations, 626
colloid, 624, 626
emulsions, 624, 626
Hofmeister, Oskar, 709
Hofmeister, Theodor, 709
Käsebier, Gertrude, 790
pictorialist photography, 624–625
Poitevin, Alphonse Louis, 626
process, 626
Gun cotton, 487, 1485
Gunpowder fl ash, 700
Guptill, Thomas, 355
Gurney, Jeremiah, 626–627
experimented with new methods, 626
Lincoln, Abraham, 627
taught Mathew B. Brady, 626
Gutch, John Wheeley Gough, 627–628
biography, 628
church photography, 628
editors, 627, 628
partial paralysis, 627–628
photographic collages, 628
Picturesque Beauty, 627
practiced medicine, 627, 628
salted paper, 628
scientifi c pursuits, 627
wet collodion glass negatives, 628
Gutekunst, Frederick, 629
dean of American photographers, 629
portraits, 629
Guy, Alice, 572
Gyokusen, Ukai, see Ukai Gyokusen
H
Haas, Philip, 631
Civil War, 631
daguerreotypes, fi rst to produce lithograph
directly from, 631
Haes, Frank, 631
Haiti, 285
Halévey family, Degas, Edgar, 399–400
Halation, Niépce de Saint-Victor, Claude Félix
Abel, 1002
Hale, Luther Holman, 631–632
daguerreotypes, 631–632
Halftones, 632–633, 1117–1118
advertising, 11
color, 632–633
Ives, Frederic(k) Eugene
invented fi rst cross-line halftone screen,
762
invented halftone printing process,
761–762
mass-print photographically realistic
images, 632
newspapers, 632
Hentschel, Carl, 651
photolithography, 1117–1118
process, 632
reproduction, 840–841
Hamburg, Stelzner, Carl Ferdinand, 1337
Hamel, Josef, 1227, 1228
Hammerschmidt, Wilhelm, 633
Egypt, 633
light, 633
Société française de photographie, 633
Hand cameras, 254, 703, 803, 1277, see also
Detective cameras
Annan, James Craig, 43
camera design, 249–251
box-form plate cameras, 250
Brownie cameras, 250
compact collapsing hand cameras, 250
detective cameras, 250
folding hand cameras, 250–251
Kodak cameras, 250
magazine plate cameras, 250
rollholders, 250
composition, 328
E&HT Anthony & Co., 50
rollholders, 254
Stieglitz, Alfred, 704
Hand coloring, 322–324, 323, 323, 909, 910,
1123–1124
albumen print, 129
Arago, François, 322
Beard, Richard, 322
Claudet, Antoine François Jean, 322–324
daguerreotypes, 322–324
process, 322
Hand-held cameras, 698–699
Hansen, George E., 633
Danish photographer, 633
portraits, 633
royal photography, 633
Hardwich, T.F., fading, 1060