Four ferns - done with cloth "halftone" screen thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
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Four ferns - done with cloth "halftone" screen

Print
ca.1858 (photographed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Talbot was the British inventor of photography. In 1834 he discovered how to make and fix images through the action of light and chemistry on paper. These ‘negatives’ could be used to make multiple prints. This revolutionised image making.

Talbot excelled in many fields, including mathematics, optics, botany and chemistry. However, it was his inability to master drawing outdoors that prompted him to experiment with capturing images inside a camera. He published his photographic discoveries and ideas, illustrated with original photographs, in his book The Pencil of Nature. Talbot patented his negative photographic process, which he called the ‘calotype’, in 1841. Later, he pioneered photographic engraving – printing photographs in ink. His processes became the basis of virtually all subsequent photography.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleFour ferns - done with cloth "halftone" screen (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Brief description
Print by William Henry Fox Talbot, 'Four ferns - done with cloth "halftone" screen', photoglyphic engraving, ca.1858
Physical description
Photographic engraving, mounted on light card.
Dimensions
  • Image height: 260mm
  • Image width: 218mm
Marks and inscriptions
Fern Leaves. Photo-engraving by Fox Talbot, showing crape veil (Recto, on label in Charles Henry Talbot's hand (son of the artist).)
Gallery label
  • Photography Centre 2018-20: William Henry Fox Talbot (1800–77) Talbot was the British inventor of photography. In 1834 he discovered how to make and fix images through the action of light and chemistry on paper. These ‘negatives’ could be used to make multiple prints. This revolutionised image making. Talbot excelled in many fields, including mathematics, optics, botany and chemistry. However, it was his inability to master drawing outdoors that prompted him to experiment with capturing images inside a camera. He published his photographic discoveries and ideas, illustrated with original photographs, in his book The Pencil of Nature. Talbot patented his negative photographic process, which he called the ‘calotype’, in 1841. Later, he pioneered photographic engraving – printing photographs in ink. His processes became the basis of virtually all subsequent photography. You can see how calotypes are made in the ‘Dark Tent’ film room in Room 99. The Royal Photographic Society Collection at the V&A, acquired with the generous assistance of the Heritage Lottery Fund and Art Fund
  • Cameraless Photography William Henry Fox Talbot (1800–77) Ferns Leaves c.1852 Photographic engraving 26 x 21.8 cm Museum no. RPS. 246-2017 Initially, reproducing a range of middle tones was a challenge for Talbot, for any wide channels in his intaglio plates lost some of their ink when wiped over to remove excess ink from the blank areas. His first solution to the problem was to create the equivalent of the half-tone dot. Close examination of this print and its plate reveals that he imposed a piece of loosely-woven fabric over the image, breaking up the solid areas into small ones that would retain their ink but still give good tonalities to the eye at a normal viewing distance. The Royal Photographic Society Collection at the V&A, acquired with the generous assistance of the Heritage Lottery Fund and Art Fund
Credit line
The Royal Photographic Society Collection at the V&A, acquired with the generous assistance of the National Lottery Heritage Fund and Art Fund.
Production
From a plate in the RPS collection, RPS025492. From frame with a label for Whitechapel Art Gallery Photographic Exhibition 1905.
Summary
Talbot was the British inventor of photography. In 1834 he discovered how to make and fix images through the action of light and chemistry on paper. These ‘negatives’ could be used to make multiple prints. This revolutionised image making.

Talbot excelled in many fields, including mathematics, optics, botany and chemistry. However, it was his inability to master drawing outdoors that prompted him to experiment with capturing images inside a camera. He published his photographic discoveries and ideas, illustrated with original photographs, in his book The Pencil of Nature. Talbot patented his negative photographic process, which he called the ‘calotype’, in 1841. Later, he pioneered photographic engraving – printing photographs in ink. His processes became the basis of virtually all subsequent photography.
Associated object
PROV.1602-2017 (RPS Group record)
Bibliographic reference
Schaaf, Larry John. The Photographic Art of William Henry Fox Talbot. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2000. ISBN 0691050007.
Other numbers
  • RPS025527 - Royal Photographic Society number
  • 2003-5001/2/28409 - Science Museum Group accession number
  • XRP597 - RPS collection - V&A identifier
Collection
Accession number
RPS.246-2017

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Record createdMarch 31, 2017
Record URL
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