Idyls of the Norfolk Broads
Photograph
1887 (published)
1887 (published)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This 1887 portfolio is a poetic portrayal of East Norfolk. Emerson depicts the region as an ‘earthly paradise’ that is in harmony with the changing seasons; from the pleasure of men contemplating the forthcoming harvest in Spring, to the silence of landscape in the snowy Winter, viewers can experience the peacefulness of pastoral life for themselves.
Emerson was particularly rigorous about printing processes and technical excellence. He favoured a photomechanical process called photogravure (or what he also referred to as ‘autogravure’, ‘copper plate engraving’ and ‘photo-etching’) for its ‘subtlety and delicacy’.
He describes the 12 images within this portfolio as ‘printed from copper plates’ reproduced from his original negatives that were ‘taken directly from Nature’ – being faithful to what the lens had captured rather than creating artificial composites in the studio or dark room. He also specifies that in the process of reproduction ‘no retouching has marred the subtleties of Nature’s handiwork’.
This delicate image depicts the rear view of two small children walking. As Emerson writes in the accompanying text, the children have spied a ‘fieldmouse which has quickly disappeared’. The subject of unselfconscious village children following animals in the countryside also appears in A Toad in the Path (first published in 1888), plate 9 of the portfolio Pictures of East Anglian Life (1890).
Emerson was particularly rigorous about printing processes and technical excellence. He favoured a photomechanical process called photogravure (or what he also referred to as ‘autogravure’, ‘copper plate engraving’ and ‘photo-etching’) for its ‘subtlety and delicacy’.
He describes the 12 images within this portfolio as ‘printed from copper plates’ reproduced from his original negatives that were ‘taken directly from Nature’ – being faithful to what the lens had captured rather than creating artificial composites in the studio or dark room. He also specifies that in the process of reproduction ‘no retouching has marred the subtleties of Nature’s handiwork’.
This delicate image depicts the rear view of two small children walking. As Emerson writes in the accompanying text, the children have spied a ‘fieldmouse which has quickly disappeared’. The subject of unselfconscious village children following animals in the countryside also appears in A Toad in the Path (first published in 1888), plate 9 of the portfolio Pictures of East Anglian Life (1890).
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Idyls of the Norfolk Broads (series title) |
Materials and techniques | photogravure |
Brief description | Photograph, 'The Skirt of the Village', by Peter Henry Emerson, photogravure, Plate 1, from the 'Idyls of the Norfolk Broads' portfolio, 1887 |
Physical description | Photogravure of 2 children, facing away |
Dimensions |
|
Styles | |
Credit line | Presented by P.H. Emerson on 27 March, 1888 |
Subject depicted | |
Summary | This 1887 portfolio is a poetic portrayal of East Norfolk. Emerson depicts the region as an ‘earthly paradise’ that is in harmony with the changing seasons; from the pleasure of men contemplating the forthcoming harvest in Spring, to the silence of landscape in the snowy Winter, viewers can experience the peacefulness of pastoral life for themselves. Emerson was particularly rigorous about printing processes and technical excellence. He favoured a photomechanical process called photogravure (or what he also referred to as ‘autogravure’, ‘copper plate engraving’ and ‘photo-etching’) for its ‘subtlety and delicacy’. He describes the 12 images within this portfolio as ‘printed from copper plates’ reproduced from his original negatives that were ‘taken directly from Nature’ – being faithful to what the lens had captured rather than creating artificial composites in the studio or dark room. He also specifies that in the process of reproduction ‘no retouching has marred the subtleties of Nature’s handiwork’. This delicate image depicts the rear view of two small children walking. As Emerson writes in the accompanying text, the children have spied a ‘fieldmouse which has quickly disappeared’. The subject of unselfconscious village children following animals in the countryside also appears in A Toad in the Path (first published in 1888), plate 9 of the portfolio Pictures of East Anglian Life (1890). |
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.139-2015 |
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Record created | April 15, 2015 |
Record URL |
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