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Fishing at the Falls of Rossie

  • Object:

    Photograph

  • Place of origin:

    Scotland, Great Britain (made)

  • Date:

    1848-1850 (made)

  • Artist/Maker:

    Horatio Ross, born 1801 - died 1886 (maker)

  • Materials and Techniques:

    Daguerreotype

  • Credit Line:

    Given by Maj. Ross

  • Museum number:

    245-1946

  • Gallery location:

    Prints & Drawings Study Room, room 512M, case MX23, shelf 3

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Object Type
Daguerreotypes (an early type of photograph on a silvered copper plate) were usually protected by glass and sometimes kept in leather or thick plastic cases because the highly polished surface is easily scratched. The image is a unique positive made directly onto the plate without a negative, as in other forms of photography. Many daguerreotype photographers replaced miniature painters as makers of portraits as the process was quicker and less expensive.

Ownership & Use
Daguerreotypes were not made primarily for public display in exhibitions. Such small and intimate photographs were generally produced as private keepsakes and often remained within the family.

People
Horatio Ross (1801-1886) took up photography in 1845, although he is also remembered as one of the 19th century's finest sportsmen. He was best known for steeplechasing (a form of horse racing) and as a marksman. Ross and his sons represented Scotland in the National Rifle Association championships in 1863.

Subjects Depicted
Daguerreotypes of apparently spontaneous outdoor scenes are rare, since the process was more easily controlled in a studio. This unusual image may well be the first photograph of fly-fishing.

Place of Origin

Scotland, Great Britain (made)

Date

1848-1850 (made)

Artist/maker

Horatio Ross, born 1801 - died 1886 (maker)

Materials and Techniques

Daguerreotype

Dimensions

Height: 12.3 cm including surround and border, Width: 10.9 cm, Depth: 0.7 cm

Object history note

Taken in Scotland by Horatio Ross (born in Angus, 1801, died in Highland region, 1886)

Descriptive line

Daguerreotype of Horatio and Colin Ross and Old David Dear fishing at the Falls of Rossie, taken in Scotland by Horatio Ross, 1848-1850

Exhibition History

John Muir Wood and the Origins of Landscape Photography in Scotland (Scottish National Portrait Gallery 02/08/2008-26/10/2008)

Labels and date

British Galleries:
DAGUERREOTYPES

Daguerreotypes are the earliest widely known photographs: their startling clarity is still impressive. The image is made on a brightly polished sheet of silvered copper. This process was initially used almost entirely for commercial portraiture. The photographs here by an early amateur, Horatio Ross, show a self-portrait and a fishing scene, prototypes of the ever-popular 'family snapshot'. [27/03/2003]

Subjects depicted

Men; Landscapes (representations); Children; Rivers; Mountains; Bridges (built works); Fishing; Leisure; Waterfalls; Childhood; Sport; Ross, Horatio

Categories

Photographs

Collection code

PDP

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Qr_O77493
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