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Early Photography - Quiz 1
From the Daguerrotype to ?
54
Art History
Undergraduate 2
02/03/2014

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Term
daguerreotype
Definition
a highly detailed image on a copper coated silver plate, invented in 1839
Term
Henry Fox Talbot
Definition
- invented the photogenic drawing, which was a negative image on paper but not as detailed
- wrote a book called the Pencil of Nature.
Term
John Llewelyn
Definition
In 1856 he announced his own oxymel process which allowed collodion negatives to be preserved over many days.
Term
Oxymel Process
Definition
invented by Llewelyn, allowed collodion negatives to be preserved over many days
Term
Charles Piazzi Smyth
Definition
was Astronomer Royal for Scotland from 1846 to 1888, well known for many innovations in astronomy and his pyramidological and metrological studies of the Great Pyramid of Giza
Term
William Leggo
Definition
was a Canadian inventor, engraver and businessperson. He is noted for co-inventing the half-tone engraver with George-Édouard Desbarats. He had several patents to his name, including leggotyping and granulated photography.
Term
Antoine Hercule Romuald Florence
Definition
was a French-Brazilian painter and inventor, known as the isolate inventor of photography in Brazil, three years before Daguerre, using the matrix negative/positive, still in use.
Term
Anna Atkins
Definition
published the first illustrated book (on algae)
Term
Hippolyte Bayard
Definition
photographer. French. Self portrait as a drowned man. Independantly hybridized the daguerrotype to be printed on paper.
Term
John Herschel
Definition
invented the cyanotype, which was good for photogram
Term
Wet Collodian
Definition
was faster than the daguerrotype for exposure and could offer more detail but required very still subjects. Required lots of cumbersome equipment. images were made on glass.
Term
Carte de visite
Definition
allowed for up to eight miniature portraits to be printed on the same negative. Emphasized the dress and comportment of the gentleman rather than the features. Status symbol. 2x4.
Term
Stereograph
Definition
two images of the same subject taken slightly apart and pasted side by side on a card presents a 3D image.
Term
Julia Margaret Cameron
Definition
took up photography in middle age, and created a large body of work for aesthetic reasons. Used it as an art form rather than for documentation.
Term
Mission Heliographique
Definition
was a mostly artistic endeavour but technically advanced. Nationalist. Contained big names. They had a journal but it fizzled out, unlike the English counterpart La Lumiere
Term
Gustave Le Gray
Definition
was an innovative photographer, who helped further the wet collation process and was concerned with landscapes and the inimmediacy of photography. Did the first photoshopping with clouds.
Term
François Jean Dominique Arago (1786-1853)
Definition
- Director of the Paris observatory
- Member of the Chambre des Deputes
- Permanent Secretary, Académie des Sciences
Term
depth of field
Definition
the perceived distance from subjects in the foreground to the background
Term
under exposure
Definition
allowing too little light to hit the sensor (making the image too dark)
Term
over exposure
Definition
allowing too much light to hit the sensor (making the image too bright)
Term
Eadweard Muybridge
Definition
English photographer, known for his animal locomotion shots and his zoopraxiscope, a device for projecting motion pictures that pre-dated the flexible perforated film strip used in cinematography.
Term
Prestidigitization
Definition
magic tricks
Term
Robert Barker
Definition
patented the London panorama in 1787
Term
Diorama
Definition
opened by Daguerre in Paris in 1822.
Term
Camera Obscura
Definition
means dark room, invented around 1540, properties known for longer. the thing you use to see an eclipse.
Term
Physiognotrace portrait
Definition
instrument designed to trace a person's general appearance
Term
Claude glass
Definition
dark tinted mirror used to enhance the colours of landscape, making the scene more painterly
Term
dark tinted mirror used to enhance the colours of landscape, making the scene more painterly
Definition
black mirror
Term
Niepce
Definition
first photograph view from his window at Le Gras, super long exposure on a pewter plate coated with asphalt-like substance
Term
Daguerrotype Plate Sizes
Definition
Whole, half, quarter, sixth, ninth.
Term
Who took the first carte de visite photos of Queen Victoria?
Definition
John Mayall
Term
Antoine Claudet
Definition
improved the sensitizing process by using chlorine in addition to iodine, thus gaining greater rapidity. also invented the dark-room light.
Term
calotype
Definition
early photographic process where negatives were made using paper coated with silver iodide. could be reproduced.
Term
Who presented the world's first public photograph exhibition?
Definition
Bayard in June 1839.
Term
Frederick Archer
Definition
inventor of wet collodian
Term
ambrotype
Definition
grey/beige image of negative on glass backed with black something (varnish, cloth, paper) to produce a unique positive.
Term
tintype
Definition
16 exposures on 1 plate, thin and able to be cut. used wet collodian. made of japanned iron.
Term
Matthew Brady
Definition
American civil war photographer. father of photojournalism.
Term
John Whipple
Definition
first to manufacture chemicals for daguerrotypes in the states, pioneered astronomical and night photography. first to produce images of the stars.
Term
James Black
Definition
first successful aerial photographer
Term
Cabinet card
Definition
thin 4x6 photo
Term
Felice Beato
Definition
Italian–British photographer. He was one of the first people to take photographs in East Asia and one of the first war photographers. He is noted for his genre works, portraits, and views and panoramas of the architecture and landscapes of Asia and the Mediterranean region. Beato's travels gave him the opportunity to create images of countries, people, and events that were unfamiliar and remote to most people in Europe and North America. His work provides images of such events as the Indian Rebellion of 1857 and the Second Opium War, and represents the first substantial oeuvre of photojournalism.
Term
John Draper
Definition
took the first photograph of the moon
Term
John and William Langenheim
Definition
Brothers William and Frederick Langenheim became two of the first successful commercial photographers in America. They not only ran a successful portrait studio but also helped pioneer several photographic advancements in the United States: the use of glass negatives and positives to make prints and projections, and the calotype process to make stereo images. They were the first photographers to travel around the United States making and selling popular tourist views.
Term
Claude-Joseph-Désiré Charnay
Definition
commissioned by the French government in 1857 and spent four years collecting relics in Mexico and compiling a photographic archive
o of the ruins there.
- later expeditions to Madagascar (1863), North America (1867–70), South America (1875), and Australia and Oceania (1878).
o •Le Mexique, souvenirs et impressions de voyage (1863), his personal report on the expedition of 1857-1861
Term
William de la Rue
Definition
invented a device which allowed the sun to be mapped through photography
Term
albumen print
Definition
It used the albumen found in egg whites to bind the photographic chemicals to the paper and became the dominant form of photographic positives
Term
E. & H. T. Anthony & Company
Definition
was the largest supplier and distributors of photographic supplies in the United States during the 19th century
Term
Guillaume-Benjamin-Amand Duchenne
Definition
took photos of crazy people
Term
Muybridge and Marey
Definition
famous for their photographs of motion studies
Term
Lady Eastlake
Definition
female writer and photographer
Term
Charles Baudelaire
Definition
art critic. said things like, "A revengeful God has given ear to the prayers of this multitude. Daguerre was his Messiah. And now the faithful says to himself: “Since photography gives us every guarantee of exactitude that we could desire (they really believe that, the mad fools!), then photography and Art are the same thing:’ From that moment our squalid society rushed, Narcissus to a man, to gaze at its trivial image on a scrap of metal. A mad­ness..."
Term
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Definition
invented the stereoscope
Term
Frederick Catherwood
Definition
artist and designer who took photographs during his visit with writer, Stephens, to the Yucatan. Wrote books titled Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas and Yucatán, and Incidents of Travel in Yucatán.
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