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Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level E , Case NX, Shelf 72

Photograph

ca. 1900 (made)
Artist/Maker

British photographer Henry Irving mastered two complex photographic techniques: the platinum print and the autochrome, which is an early colour process. A number of autochromes and glass negatives are held by the Natural History Museum. The V&A collection holds 177 platinum prints of exquisite quality. The platinum process was a refined printing technique that allowed for a plethora of grey shades and great amount of detail. The prints mark the high tide of the platinum process, which became less common after the outbreak of the First World War. Platinum proved an excellent catalyst for explosives, and was therefore too precious a material to use for printing.

Though Irving was never a member of the Royal Photographic Society, his photographs were exhibited during his lifetime in the annual exhibitions of 1899 (1 print), 1910 (1 print), 1911 (4 prints), 1913 (6 prints), 1914 (1 print), 1915 (3 prints), 1921 (7 autochromes) and 1922 (13 prints). His work was published in books for fine art students as aides to draw from nature, as well as numerous botanical publications held by the NAL.


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Platinum print
Brief description
Photograph of Mongolian wild horses (Przewalski's horse) photographed at the Zoological Gardens, London, by Henry Irving
Marks and inscriptions
Gallery label
Associations
Summary
British photographer Henry Irving mastered two complex photographic techniques: the platinum print and the autochrome, which is an early colour process. A number of autochromes and glass negatives are held by the Natural History Museum. The V&A collection holds 177 platinum prints of exquisite quality. The platinum process was a refined printing technique that allowed for a plethora of grey shades and great amount of detail. The prints mark the high tide of the platinum process, which became less common after the outbreak of the First World War. Platinum proved an excellent catalyst for explosives, and was therefore too precious a material to use for printing.

Though Irving was never a member of the Royal Photographic Society, his photographs were exhibited during his lifetime in the annual exhibitions of 1899 (1 print), 1910 (1 print), 1911 (4 prints), 1913 (6 prints), 1914 (1 print), 1915 (3 prints), 1921 (7 autochromes) and 1922 (13 prints). His work was published in books for fine art students as aides to draw from nature, as well as numerous botanical publications held by the NAL.
Bibliographic reference
Wayside and Woodland Trees: a Pocket Guide to the British Sylva (1905) by Edward Step, illustrated with one hundred and twenty-seven plates with photographs by Henry Irving. Flowers and Plants for Designers and Schools (1907) by Edward F. Strange, illustrated with photographs by Henry Irving. Trees and their Life Histories (1909) by Percy Groom, illustrated with photographs by Henry Irving. How to Know the Trees (1911) by Henry Irving. The Nature-Lover’s Handbook (1911) by R. Kearton, illustrated with photographs by Henry Irving. Trees, a Woodland Notebook (1915) by Herbert Eustace Maxwell, illustrated with photographs by Henry Irving and others. A review of How to Know the Trees was published by C.L.F. in American Midland Naturalist, Vol. 8, No. 2 (Mar., 1922), p. 72
Collection
Accession number
PH.653-1905

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Record createdFebruary 6, 2015
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