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Pictures of East Anglian Life

Photograph
1888 (made), 1890 (published)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

In 1889 Emerson published his controversial book Naturalistic Photography for Students of the Art without images. Naturalistic Photography examined his purist approach to photography, derived from his fascination with Naturalism in art, and attacked the prevailing artificial aesthetic in art photography. After its publication Emerson felt that his opponents had misunderstood his ideas. So, in 1890 he selected 10 plates from his book Pictures of East Anglian Life (1888) that best illustrated his theories, and presented them loose in a portfolio dedicated to the ‘photographic student’, with the same title and cover of the book. He then donated copies of this portfolio to every photographic society in the country.

One of the most iconic images of this series, Haymaker with Rake reveals Emerson’s sympathetic position towards the hardship of East Anglian rural communities. It illustrates Oliver Goldsmith’s verses that Emerson included as an epigraph to the book:
But a bold peasantry, their country’s pride
When once destroyed can never be supplied.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitlePictures of East Anglian Life (series title)
Materials and techniques
photogravure
Brief description
Photograph, 'Haymaker with Rake', by Peter Henry Emerson, photogravure, Plate 10, from the 'Pictures of East Anglian Life' portfolio, 1890
Physical description
A mounted black and white photograph showing a man with a rake
Dimensions
  • Image height: 27.7cm
  • Image width: 19.6cm
  • Paper height: 42.5cm
  • Paper width: 34cm
Mount is half imperial portrait.
Style
Credit line
Gift of the photographer
Object history
A portfolio containing 10 India proofs taken from the eponymous book (1888, 32 photogravures), published as a companion to his other book 'Naturalistic Photography for Students of the Art' (1889). With preface and Notes to the Student in the inside cover of the portfolio folder. Gift of the photographer 1890, transferred from the Print Collection, 1896
Summary
In 1889 Emerson published his controversial book Naturalistic Photography for Students of the Art without images. Naturalistic Photography examined his purist approach to photography, derived from his fascination with Naturalism in art, and attacked the prevailing artificial aesthetic in art photography. After its publication Emerson felt that his opponents had misunderstood his ideas. So, in 1890 he selected 10 plates from his book Pictures of East Anglian Life (1888) that best illustrated his theories, and presented them loose in a portfolio dedicated to the ‘photographic student’, with the same title and cover of the book. He then donated copies of this portfolio to every photographic society in the country.

One of the most iconic images of this series, Haymaker with Rake reveals Emerson’s sympathetic position towards the hardship of East Anglian rural communities. It illustrates Oliver Goldsmith’s verses that Emerson included as an epigraph to the book:
But a bold peasantry, their country’s pride
When once destroyed can never be supplied.
Associated objects
Bibliographic reference
John Taylor The old order and the new: P H Emerson and photography, 1885-1895 Munich; New York; London: Prestel, 2006. 160p.: ill (some col). ISBN: 3791336991 / 9783791336992.
Collection
Accession number
E.165-2015

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Record createdMay 11, 2015
Record URL
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