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History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014
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History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

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Page 1: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

History of photography (part 1):age of portraits

Marc LevoyComputer Science DepartmentStanford University

CS 178, Spring 2014

Page 2: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

Outline✦ invention of photography

✦ daguerreotypes and the age of portraits

✦ more in later lectures...

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Page 3: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

The camera obscura

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(Gustavson)

Vermeer, The Music Lesson (c. 1665)

(Gregory)

Page 4: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

The camera obscura

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Philip Steadman’s model (1995) Vermeer, The Music Lesson (c. 1665)

(Gregory)

Page 5: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

The camera obscura

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Philip Steadman’s model (1995)Philip Steadman’s model (1995)

Page 6: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

The camera obscura

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Philip Steadman’s model (1995)

Page 7: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

The camera obscura

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Philip Steadman’s model (1995) Vermeer, The Music Lesson (c. 1665)

Page 8: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

Nicéphore Niépce (1765-1833)✦ first photographic image

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View from the window at Le Gras, 1826

• bitumen on pewter plate

• 8-hour exposure

Page 9: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

Louis Daguerre (1787-1851)✦ painter

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The Effect of Fog and Snow Seen through a Ruined Gothic Colonnade, 1826

Page 10: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

Louis Daguerre (1787-1851)✦ inventor of the diorama

10Diorama in Regent’s Park, London, 1823

Page 11: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

Louis Daguerre (1787-1851)

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modern diorama at theAmerican Museum of Natural History

Page 12: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

Louis Daguerre (1787-1851)✦ the daguerreotype

12Still life, 1837

• silver halide on polished metal

• no negative, so cannot reproduce

• tone reversal unless lit carefully

(Newhall)

Page 13: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

Louis Daguerre (1787-1851)✦ the daguerreotype

13Still life, 1837

• silver halide on polished metal

• no negative, so cannot reproduce

• tone reversal unless lit carefully

(Newhall)

Page 14: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

William Talbot (1800-1877)✦ the calotype

14Latticed window at Lacock Abbey, 1835

• paper impregnated with silver chloride

• fading arrested with hyposulfite of soda (“hypo”)

• negative, so allows any number of positive prints

• name “photography” suggested by F. W. Herschel

Page 15: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

The daguerreotype portrait

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making a daguerreotype, 1843

• sitter’s head stabilized with a metal brace

• hands clenched toavoid movement

(Rosenblum)

Page 16: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

The daguerreotype camera

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Giroux camera, 1839

Petzval’s lens, 1840

• f/3.7

• reduced exposure time 20×

• exposure still 5-8 seconds

f/15

manual shutter

instead of f/16.7

(Gustavson)

Page 17: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

The daguerreotype portrait

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Gustav Oehme, Three Young Girls, c. 1845

(Rosenblum)

Page 18: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

Pop quiz - who are these people?

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Alexander von Humboldt, 1847(photograph by Hermann Blow)

• naturalist and explorer of Central and South America

• father of modern meteorology

• magnetic declination, igneous origin of rocks, etc.

(Rosenblum)

painting of Humboldtby Friedrich Weitsch(1806)

Page 19: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

Samuel Morse, ca. 1845

• inventor of telegraph(and Morse code)

• painter

painting by Morseof Mrs. Bacot(1830)

Page 20: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

Abraham Lincoln, c. 1846(photograph by Nicholas Shepherd)

Page 21: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

Edgar Allen Poe, 1848(photograph by W.S. Hartshorn)

Page 22: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

Lewis Caroll, 1863(photograph by Oscar Rejlander)

• mathematician andauthor of children’s books(Alice in Wonderland)

• albumen paper printmade from wet-plate collodion negative(from here on)

(Rosenblum)

photograph byLewis Carollof Alice Lidell(1858)

Page 23: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

Sarah Bernhardt, 1865(photograph by Gaspard Tournachon)

• most famous actressof the 19th century(“divine Sarah”)

(Rosenblum)

Page 24: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

Julia Jackson, 1867(photograph by Julia Margaret Cameron)

• mother ofauthor Virginia Woolf

(Rosenblum)

Virginia Woolf

Page 25: History of photography (part 1): age of portraits · History of photography (part 1): age of portraits Marc Levoy Computer Science Department Stanford University CS 178, Spring 2014

© Marc Levoy

Slide credits✦ Newhall, B., The History of Photography, Little, Brown & Co., 1982.

✦ Rosenblum, N., A World History of Photography (4th ed.), Abbeville Press, 2007.

✦ Gustavson, T., Camera, Sterling Publishing, 2009.

✦ Gregory, R., et al., The Artful Eye, Oxford University Press, 1995.

✦ http://wikipedia.org

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