The V&A was the fist museum to collect photographs and began to accumulate them in 1852 with the first exhibition taking place in 1858. Its collection is now among the most important in the world and it forms the national photography collection. The works currently on display in the gallery are highlights from the permanent collection and document the history of photography from its earliest beginnings to the present day. The exhibition is organised in seven sections: Discovery, Documents, Records and Travel, Facts and Focus, After the War: Personal Vision, Modernism , Recent Acquisitions and finally In Focus: The Museum Photographers.
Discovery
Photography was officially announced in 1839 by Louis Daguerre in France and William Henry Fox Talbot in England. Both made use of the light sensitivity of silver salts, Daguerre using metal plates and Fox Talbot Paper. Fox Talbot's use of photosensitive paper led to the development of negatives. From this period the museum has examples of Daguerrotypes such as those by Antoine Claudet from 1847 and John Benjamin Dancer from 1857. In both instances it is clear that these are images on metal plates and appear to have been hand coloured.
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During the second half of the 19th century the commercial potential of photography was realised as it was an ideal medium to combine science and art in the new industrial age. Western photographers travelled widely with heavy and cumbersome equipment and often worked in difficult conditions. Their images crossed the boundaries of commercial, documentary, social and artistic photography. Portrait studios thrived and cartes-de-visite became very popular. Photographs became a powerful tool for documenting, classifying or controlling people and places and for the visual dissemination of both facts and opinion.
One example of this genre that I liked and had come across before was the 1855 salted paper image of Soldiers at Camp by Roger Fenton. Fenton was one of the first war photographers, often enduring harsh conditions and the technical complications of the wet colloidon process to produce 360 images of the British army during the Crimean War.
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In the early years of the twentieth century photography reached a crossroads. Some photographers adopted a factual style or 'straight photography' where subjects were recorded sharply and with precision. Others chose a more personal and self-consciously artistic approach that imitated painting. They favoured fine, limited and hand-crafted prints and soft-focus effects that they saw as being in keeping with 'naturalistic' human vision. These were the 'Pictorialist' photographers who formed societies promoting the cause of photography as fine art over its prevailing status as a mechanised medium.
Edward Steichen began his photographic career as a proponent of the Pictorialist genre until perhaps the beginning of the first World War. Initially he aspired to be a painter but after the war he destroyed all of his paintings. This image 'Heavy Roses, Voulangis, France', is probably the last photograph he took in France before the outbreak of the war. It has a painterly quality and the fact the the blooms are slowly withering can be looked at as a metaphor for the tragedy to come. It has inspired me to photography some slowly dying roses my wife was given for her birthday.
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After the Second World War, photography was increasingly understood as a form of documentation that could also communicate a personal vision. Magazines and the fashion industry enabled photographers to earn a living out of the medium whist at the same time allowing them individual expression. Photographers began to try to understand and explore the world through their photography which began to be used as part of conceptual art.
Cartier-Bresson became interested in photography in 1930, around the same time he met the Surrealists. This surreal image reveals a strong sense of geometry and composition.
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The V&A continues to collect both historic and contemporary work. The recently acquired work covers the spans the 1970s to the present. Several of the works explore photography's relationship to other media, including painting and film. Most are conventional images but some are digital or are chemically altered.
Kevin Lear presented this image 'Jiving at the Long Bar - Southend on Sea' taken in 1974 to the V&A. Born in 1947 he grew up in the rock'n'roll years of the 1950s. In the 70s the fashions and music made a comeback and Lear made a series of photographs of the Teddy Boy revival. The result is a mixture of 1950s and 1970s styles.
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In the period between the wars photographers embraced the mechanical aspects of the medium as never before. Many found photography a fitting tool for recording the dynamic streets and dizzying heights of the expanding city. Some experimented with extreme vantage points of high or low which often resulted in abstract images. Others combined photography with typography or used camera-less techniques. The sleek glamour of modernism was also evident in fashion photography and portraiture. Documentary photography was often used to portray a social message.
Although Paul Strand is best known as a still photographer, in the 1920s he worked as a film maker. In this photograph taken in 1923 and printed in 1975 he uses a new movie camera as a subject for a still image.
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Images
1. Benjamin Dancer, J 1851 Scientist in His Laboratory
[daguerreotype stereograph] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O119158/scientist-in-his-laboratory-daguerreotype-dancer-john-benjamin/ [Accessed 13.8.14]
2. Dodgson, C. 1857, The Anatomy lesson with Dr George Rolleston [albument print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O182302/the-anatomy-lesson-with-dr-photograph-unknown/ [Accessed 13.8.14]
3. Unknown, 1860, Cloud Study [albumen print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/search/?listing_type=imagetext&offset=0&limit=15&narrow=1&extrasearch=&q=Cloud+study%2C+unknown+photographer&commit=Search&quality=1&objectnamesearch=&placesearch=&after=&after-adbc=AD&before=&before-adbc=AD&namesearch=&materialsearch=&mnsearch=&locationsearch= [Accessed 13.8.14]
4. Fenton, R. 1855, Soldiers at Camp [salted paper print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/search/?listing_type=imagetext&offset=0&limit=15&narrow=1&extrasearch=&q=Soldiers+at+Camp%2C+Roger+Fenton&commit=Search&quality=1&objectnamesearch=&placesearch=&after=&after-adbc=AD&before=&before-adbc=AD&namesearch=&materialsearch=&mnsearch=&locationsearch= [Accessed 13.8.14]
5. Horne and Thornthwaite, Mayall, J.E., Unknown, 1860s, Cartes-de
visite, [hand coloured albumen prints] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/galleries/level-3/room-100-photographs-gallery/ [Accessed 13.8.14]
6. Dixon, H. with Boole, A&J, 1875, Cloth Fair London, [carbon print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/search/?listing_type=imagetext&offset=0&limit=15&narrow=1&extrasearch=&q=Cloth+Fair+London+Henry+Dixon&commit=Search&quality=1&objectnamesearch=&placesearch=&after=&after-adbc=AD&before=&before-adbc=AD&namesearch=&materialsearch=&mnsearch=&locationsearch= [Accessed 13.8.14]
7. Sutcliffe, F.M. 1880, Whitby Upper Harbour, [albumen print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/search/?listing_type=imagetext&offset=0&limit=15&narrow=1&extrasearch=&q=Whitby+Upper+Harbour%2C+Frank+Sutcliffe&commit=Search&quality=1&objectnamesearch=&placesearch=&after=&after-adbc=AD&before=&before-adbc=AD&namesearch=&materialsearch=&mnsearch=&locationsearch= [Accessed 13.8.14]
8. Steichen, E. 1914, Heavy Roses, Voulangis, France, http://www.afterimagegallery.com/steichenheavyroses.htm
9. Hartwig, E. 1933, Vienna by Night, [gum bichromate print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O1141241/vienna-by-night-photograph-hartwig-edward/ [Accessed 13.8.14]
10. Stieglitz, A. 1932, Poplars, Lake George, [gelatin silver print] [online image], V&A, Available from: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O118846/poplars-lake-george-photograph-stieglitz-alfred/ [Accessed 13.8.14]
11. Cartier-Bresson, H. 1931, Shop Window, Hungary, [gelatin silver print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://www.magnumphotos.com/image/PAR44916.html [Accessed 13.8.14]
12. Horvat, F. 1958, Givenchy Hat, Paris, [elatin silver print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O166914/photograph/ [Accessed 13.8.14]
13. Newman, A. 1962, Marilyn Monroe, Beverly Hills, [gelatin silver print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://www.artnet.com/auctions/artists/arnold-newman/marilyn-monroe-beverly-hills-california [Accessed 13.8.14]
14. Lear, K. 1974, Jiving at the Long Bar-Southend on Sea, [gelatin silver print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O1242654/jiving-at-the-long-bar-photograph-kevin-lear/ [Accessed 13.8.14]
15. Ravillious, J. 1979, Olive Bennett and her Red Devon Cows, Cuppers Piece, Beaford, Devon, [gelatin silver print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O1249540/olive-bennett-and-her-red-photograph-james-ravilious/ [Accessed 13.8.14]
16. Strand, P. 1923, Akely Motion Picture Camera, New York City, [gelatin silver print] online image] V&A, Available from: http://www.mutualart.com/Artwork/Akeley-Motion-Picture-Camera-New-York-Ci/2568A0C56262E9C8 [Accessed 13.8.14]
17. Bing, I. 1932, Paris, Rue de Valois, [gelatin silver print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://www.classic-photographers.com/wp-content/gallery/ilse-bing/ilse_bing_puddle-rue-de-valois-paris-1932.jpg [Accessed 13.8.14]
18 Abbott,B. 1934, New York at Night (Exchange Place from Broadway), [gelatin silver print] [online image] V&A, Available from: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O112513/new-york-at-night-exchange-photograph-abbott-berenice/ [Accessed 13.8.14]
19. Weston, W. 1934, Nude, 1-50 (Legs and Arms), [gelatin silver print] V&A
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