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LL/126186
David Octavius Hill
1845 (ca)
Likeness of the Portraitist Robert Frain

Calotype
35.1 x 27.3 cm
 
Staedel Museum
Acquired in 2011 with support from the Kulturstiftung der Länder and the Hessischer Kulturstiftung, property of the Städelscher Museums-Verein e.V., Inventory Number: St.F.103
 
Invented around 1840, the calotype was the first photographic process based on the negative. This photograph is a very early example. The portrait painter Robert Frain had to pose without moving for several minutes. He is in the act of drawing, and concentrating hard on his work. Himself a trained landscape painter, Hill photographed his colleague in a manner that was also typical of painting of the period. The subject matter, arrangement and props are identical. In 1843 Hill began his collaboration with chemist Robert Adamson. Both men are considered pioneers of photography.
 
LL/126186


 

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