Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level F , Case X, Shelf 55, Box I

Tomb in Greyfriars Churchyard, Edinburgh

Photograph
1843-1847 (photographed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

One of fifty sepia-coloured photographs of people taken in Scotland and bound in album.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Titles
  • Tomb in Greyfriars Churchyard, Edinburgh (assigned by artist)
  • Dennistoun Monument with David Octavius Hill and his nieces Misses Watson, Greyfriars Churchyard (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Salt paper print from calotype negative
Brief description
Photograph by David Octavius Hill and Robert Adamson, Dennistoun Monument with David Octavius Hill and his nieces Misses Watson, Greyfriars Kirkyard, Edinburgh, salted paper print from calotype negative, 1843-47
Physical description
One of fifty sepia-coloured photographs of people taken in Scotland and bound in album.
Dimensions
  • Head to tail of closed album height: 605mm (closed album)
  • Width of closed album width: 481mm (closed album)
  • Depth of closed album depth: 62mm (closed album)
  • Width:
Style
Marks and inscriptions
'Calotypes of D.O. Hill, R.S.A / and / Robert Adamson Edinburgh / MDCCCXLIII to MDCCCXLVIII' (Title page of Volume I)
Credit line
Given by Sir Theodore Martin, 1869
Historical context
The famous partnership and collaboration between the artist David Octavius Hill and the photographer Robert Adamson came into being originally in order to produce photographic portraits to assist Hill as a painter. The team produced a wide range of superb, valuable work and they were the first consistently and successfully employ calotype process in Great Britain.

1843 Hill was introduced to Adamson and they began to collaborate on the production of calotype portraits as reference images for the painting ‘The Signing of the Deed of Demission’ which represents 474 dignitaries. Essentially, Hill posed and arranged the individual sitters or groups while Adamson attended to the technical aspects of the exposure, processing, and printing.

Some of their most powerful images, however, were made in Scottish seashore villages and depict fishermen and women. They also photographed the architecture and monument of Scotland and made calotypes of their friends posed in medieval armour or costumes.
Subjects depicted
Place depicted
Bibliographic references
  • Stevenson, Sara. 'David Octavius Hill and Robert Adamson: Catalogue of their Calotypes Taken Between 1843 and 1847 in the Collection of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery', (Edinburgh: National Galleries of Scotland, 1981). ISBN 0903148374
  • p. 53 The Origin of Photography: Great Britain. Tokyo Photographic Art Museum, 2019.
Other numbers
  • PGP HA 4318 - Scottish National Portrait Gallery negative number
  • pg. 191 (EDINBURGH 48) - National Galleries of Scotland, Hill & Adamson 1981 Catalogue, page and classification
Collection
Accession number
67316

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Record createdJuly 1, 2009
Record URL
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