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  • The invention of photography was not one discovery

  • that led to what we understand as photography today.

  • There are winners and losers in the evolution of photography.

  • It’s so fascinating at every different point in its history

  • The way that we familiarize ourselves with

  • the world around us just fundamentally changed with photography.

  • The silhouette is really the essence.

  • That’s the essence of a person’s soul

  • and people knew that.

  • The term photography in Greek is light drawing.

  • So when youre drawing with light, you can do it with chemicals

  • but before photography you would look at the shadow

  • you would trace the shadow.

  • The problem with drawing a shadow with someone is

  • that if you put a person in a room

  • and you put a candle on one side of that person and it casts a shadow

  • it’s a very big shadow.

  • So the biggest problem is how do you take a very big shadow

  • and make it into a little tiny shadow.

  • So there are tools that they used.

  • The Pantograph machine that has these intersecting bars

  • with a pencil and you could trace the large object

  • and it would make it into a very small object.

  • There was an inventor by the name of Chretien, who invented a device

  • that would trace the shadow of a person

  • through a series of levers.

  • It would then reduce the picture at the same time.

  • And this instrument is called a Physionotrace.

  • The thing about the silhouette and the Physionotrace

  • that made them different from a painted portrait was that they were mechanical.

  • They were much more objective portraits of individuals.

  • Unlike paintings, which were very subjective.

  • Camera Obscura means dark room. That’s all it is.

  • It’s a room with no light in it.

  • And if you have a room with no light

  • and you poke a little hole in the side of that room and you let light in

  • from the outside, by miracle youll have an image projected upside down

  • turned around, but in color and moving on the other side of the wall.

  • It’s a phenomena that people have been aware of for thousands

  • and thousands of years. It’s easy to do.

  • It’s very often the first project that is taught in photography classes

  • just as a way to get people to understand the simplicity

  • of what the camera is.

  • Later improvements of the camera obscura

  • included putting a lens in the hole so that the light could be focused

  • so that you would have have a brighter and more focused image

  • that would be projected on the wall.

  • But for photography the camera is essentially a box.

  • The early experimenters of photography

  • all knew that they wanted to make images in that box.

  • The story of the invention of photography builds

  • on experiment after experiment.

  • Johann Heinrich Schulze is a German professor.

  • And in the case of Schulze’s experiment what you have is a glass jar

  • and it’s filled with chalk.

  • There’s some nitric acid and there’s some silver.

  • It’s sparingly sensitive to light.

  • So you have this jar with a barrier around the outside

  • and when the light goes through the stencil

  • it then darkens the chalk that is facing the glass on the inside of the jar.

  • And this is where Schulze contributes to the evolution of photography

  • is that he’s proving that this is done by light, and not by heat.

  • Thomas Wedgwood was the son of the famous potter, Josiah Wedgwood.

  • The signature of the Wedgwood line

  • was the decoration that was made of silhouettes.

  • It’s no surprise that one of the Wedgwoods would think that

  • the light that makes a silhouette could also make an image by the action of light.

  • Wedgwood is experimenting with silver nitrate.

  • And he’s brushing silver nitrate onto sheets of paper and

  • onto pieces of stretched white leather.

  • He was making images by doing contact printing of photograms.

  • He was putting an object on top of the sensitive paper or leather.

  • and when you put these in the sun

  • it’s very easy to see the effect of light.

  • You can see the paper darkening.

  • So it makes sense he would want to make pictures in a camera obscura.

  • After all, camera obscuras have been used for years

  • to make an image on a ground glass so you could do drawings.

  • So you could see the effect of light coming into a camera obscura

  • and producing an image.

  • And yet he had no real success with his process.

  • He wasn’t able to make those images last.

  • He wasn’t able to fix the image.

  • Those images were fleeting.

  • They disappeared after a certain amount of time.

  • Talbot, Daguerre, Niepce all know about the work of Wedgwood

  • because Humphry Davy, his friend

  • had written an account of his work that was published in 1802.

  • It was a springboard

  • from which other people could then do their own experiments.

The invention of photography was not one discovery

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