George Eastman House and the Autochromes

Check out the Eastman House's photostream, now on flickr.

My favorites are the autochromes.

2678178276_66937c943f_o.jpg
Cowgirl, ca. 1910

FYI:

Photography's earliest practitioners dreamed of finding a method for reproducing the world around them in color. Some nineteenth-century photographers experimented with chemical formulations aimed at producing color images by direct exposure, while others applied paints and powders to the surfaces of monochrome prints. Vigorous experimentation led to several early color processes, some of which were even patented, but the methods were often impractical, cumbersome and unreliable.

After decades of wishing for a practical color process, photographers were thrilled when Auguste and Louis Lumière announced the invention of the autochrome process. The Lumière brothers, inventors of the motion picture camera, presented their invention to the French Academy of Sciences in 1904. The process used a screen of tiny potato starch grains dyed orange-red, green and violet. Dusted onto a glass plate, the dyed grains were covered with a layer of sensitive panchromatic silver bromide emulsion. As light entered the camera, it was filtered by the dyed grains before it reached the emulsion. While the exposure time was very long, the plate could be processed easily by a photographer familiar with standard darkroom procedures. The result was a unique, realistic, positive color image on glass that required no further printing.

George Eastman House has significant holdings of autochromes, including over 3900 examples by amateur photographer Charles Zoller of Rochester, New York. The museum also holds autochromes by Edward Steichen among others.

2678236626_6812eccb9f_o.jpg
Woman in Oriental inspired gown, sitting in wooden throne, 1915

2677415789_c715888027.jpg
Woman posed as Sphinx, ca. 1910

2678232100_73650fd5c5.jpg
Costumed man examining jewelry, ca. 1910

2677415603_1a7c270202.jpg
Genre scene, woman in kitchen peeling vegetables, ca. 1910


2677426065_68110ddeee_o.jpg
Native American Man, ca. 1910

2678177544_6bb8fc56c5.jpg
Dancer wearing Egyptian-look costume with wings reaching to the floor, ca. 1915

2677414299_f6998c42b1_o.jpg
Couple, ca. 1910



I vote for the Sphinx.
| Comments (2)

2 Comments

I love the Costumed Man Examining Jewelry. These photos look almost 3-D.

I like the so called "genre scene." Actually I like them all. Autochrome was a beautiful process. I wish it were available in some form today.

Leave a comment

0 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: George Eastman House and the Autochromes.

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://blog.photoshelter.com/mt-tb.cgi/918

House Blog - Building The Commercial Photo Community