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Photography: A Brief History Of The Art |
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Written by Administrator
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Monday, 10 March 2008 00:34 |
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As in all cases of great and valuable inventions in science and art the English lay claim to
the honor of having first discovered that of Photogenic drawing. But we shall see in the
progress of this history, that like many other assumptions of their authors, priority in this
is no more due them, then the invention of steamboats, or the cotton gin.
This claim is founded upon the fact that in 1802 Mr. Wedgwood recorded an experiment in the
Journal of the Royal Institution of the following nature.
"A piece of paper, or other convenient material, was placed upon a frame and sponged over with
a solution of nitrate of silver; it was then placed behind a painting on glass and the light
traversing the painting produced a kind of copy upon the prepared paper, those parts in which
the rays were least intercepted being of the darkest hues. Here, however, terminated the
experiment; for although both Mr. Wedgwood and Sir Humphry Davey experimented carefully, for
the purpose of endeavoring to fix the drawings thus obtained, yet the object could not be
accomplished, and the whole ended in failure."
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Last Updated ( Friday, 06 June 2008 12:01 )
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