RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘American’

Some of the oldest American photographs were found in a workshop in New York

16 Oct

You never know where or when significant historical artifacts will turn up. Some very early photographic portraits were recently found in an unheated shed on Long Island in New York. The found photographs may be some of the very first portraits captured in the United States.

In 1839, the daguerreotype process was introduced by its namesake, Louis Daguerre, in France. It was the first publicly available and commercially viable photographic process. Although eventually replaced by more affordable, easier processes, many daguerreotypes were made in the 1840s and 1850s. In the US, the race was on to turn Daguerre’s process into a money-making venture.

‘Henry Fitz Jr. (1808-1863). The ‘Profile View’ taken with the Wolcott mirror camera, January-February 1840. Housed in a heavy brass frame identified in pencil on verso “Henry Fitz Jr. of New York and Baltimore. 1808-1863.’ Image and caption credit: Hindman Auctions

Henry Fitz Jr., Alexander Wolcott and John Johnson pulled it off. Fitz Jr. patented the first American camera and opened the first photographic portrait studio in the country. Fitz Jr. was a telescope maker in New York City. His understanding of optics gave him a significant advantage over would-be competitors.

The trio began collaborating on their photographic venture in late 1839. In early 1840, Fitz was the subject of some of the earliest successful photographic portraits ever taken. In June of 1840, Fitz opened a portrait studio in Baltimore, Maryland, cornering the market, at least for a time.

‘The ‘Eyes Closed’ Portrait of Henry Fitz Jr. (NMAH Cat No. 4114A). Probably taken in JanuaryFebruary, 1840 with the Wolcott mirror camera.’ Image and caption credit: Hindman Auctions

Some of the earliest photos taken by Fitz, Wolcott and Johnson were housed in that shed on Long Island. The photos will be going up for sale by Hindman Auctions. The auction house says, ‘The cache of daguerreotypes offered here – along with the existing Fitz group at the National Museum of American History – is the largest group of images produced by a single photographer from the pioneering era of photography in America (1839-1842). In this regard it is unique. While single images from this period exist, most are anonymous, undated and orphans floating in the historical ether. By contrast, the Fitz archive can be quite tightly dated to have been produced between about January 1840 and the fall of 1842. It was during these 36 months that photography in America sprang to existence and emerged as a commercial enterprise.’

‘Julia Wells Fitz (1814-1892), wife of Henry Fitz. Ninth plate daguerreotype, housed in red leather side opening case, with heavy brass mat. With delicate tinting of cheeks and lips; dress with fugitive blue tinting. Not removed from case. The identification of this image is based on the similarity between the sitter and the oil painting of Julia Wells Fitz included in this archive.’ Image and caption credit: Hindman Auctions

The collection holds immense historical and cultural significance. While Fitz, Wolcott and Johnson were not the creators of the daguerreotype process, of course, they were at the forefront of its adoption and growth. It’s also one of the more complete collections of photographs from that time frame.

You can read the full details about the auction listing by visiting Hindman. A digital catalog about the listing is available for viewing here. In-person bidding will begin on November 15 by appointment only.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Some of the oldest American photographs were found in a workshop in New York

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Across the American west: Fujifilm GF 50mm F3.5 sample gallery

09 Feb

$ (document).ready(function() { SampleGalleryV2({“containerId”:”embeddedSampleGallery_0098865943″,”galleryId”:”0098865943″,”isEmbeddedWidget”:true,”selectedImageIndex”:0,”isMobile”:false}) });

Fujifilm’s GF 50mm F3.5 pancake prime isn’t exactly tiny, but it is impressively small given the large medium-format sensors it’s designed to work with. We paired it with a GFX 50R and took it out on the open road and to coastal California to see how it handles as a walk-around travel companion.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Across the American west: Fujifilm GF 50mm F3.5 sample gallery

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Harvard sued over allegedly profiting from 1850s images of American slaves

23 Mar

Harvard University has been sued over its licensing of daguerreotypes believed to be the first images of American slaves. The lawsuit was filed by Tamara Lanier, who says she is the direct descendant of Renty, the man featured alongside his daughter, Delia, in the daguerreotypes. The suit was filed on March 20 in the Middlesex County Superior Court.

The daguerreotypes were commissioned in 1850 by Harvard professor Louis Agassiz, a Swiss-born Harvard professor who sought the images in support of polygenism, a flawed theory that human races have different origins. The commissioned images were taken by J.T. Zealy in Columbia, South Carolina. A total of 11 slaves were photographed, including Renty and Delia, who were stripped naked and imaged from multiple angles.

The images were apparently lost for years before turning up in the Harvard University Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology’s attic in 1976. Since their discovery, according to the lawsuit, Harvard has used the images of Renty for profit, including as the cover image for the book From Site to Sight: Anthropology, Photography and the Power of Imagery, which was published by the Peabody Museum and sold by Harvard.

According to the lawsuit, Lanier had repeatedly reached out to Harvard over the images, but the university failed to address her concerns. Lanier reportedly provided Harvard officials with proof that she is one of Renty’s descendants but was unable to get a response. The lawsuit seeks to have Harvard turn over the images to Lanier’s family and to pay an unspecified amount in damages.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Harvard sued over allegedly profiting from 1850s images of American slaves

Posted in Uncategorized

 

American government roots and reform 2011 pdf

07 Sep

The more numerous Jews who migrated from Eastern American government roots and reform 2011 pdf faced tension ‘downtown’ with Irish and German Catholic neighbors, jews who shared the same political leanings. And there are several notable communities where public life and business are carried out mainly in Russian, talking Back: Images of Jewish Women in […]
BooksChantcdCom

 
Comments Off on American government roots and reform 2011 pdf

Posted in Equipment

 

Urban Legend: Why Are European Cities so Much Denser than American Ones?

22 Mar

[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Cities & Urbanism. ]

densities

At a glance, it seems obvious New York City would be more densely populated than Paris, but in fact the reverse is true: New York has only half the population density of its French competitor. In Europe, too, rich people tend to live in the hearts of cities, not in their suburbs as they often do in the United States. This fantastic short video will take you through the reasons for these differentials in just ten minutes:

Most people attribute this to the age differential — young American cities are much younger. Europeans walking to work preferred and paid a premium for proximity (and to live on lower floors before the advent of elevators). A similar effect can be found in small towns: villagers would walk to work in fields. And this is part of the story, but per the video above (and text below) there are other forces at work in the modern age.

Meanwhile, in the U.S., railroads took time to get up to speed, making it easy to build suburbs further out and not just adjacent to cities. Streetcars in turn created upper-middle-class suburbs closer into town. Finally, the automobile filled in the gaps between railroad and streetcar lines.

But why didn’t European cities experience a similar trend? In part, ones that were damaged during in world wars generally rebuilt the way they had been, and the rest kept their legacies of density throughout.

There is also the history of crime: violent urban crime drove those who could afford it out of the hearts of cities. Rural land is also cheaper in the U.S. thanks for fewer farm subsidies, making it easier for developers to buy and build remotely.

Cheaper energy costs also drive car ownership state-side, reducing motivation to locate homes close to work. Energy prices also mean that heating huge suburban homes in America is much more affordable. But these commutes are linked to higher anxiety and the trend is reversing, bringing the rich back into cities.

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Cities & Urbanism. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Urban Legend: Why Are European Cities so Much Denser than American Ones?

Posted in Creativity

 

Evolution of Decay: Watch American Buildings Fall Into Ruin Over 40+ Years

19 Nov

[ By SA Rogers in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

detroit-time-lapse-2

Architecture that was at its prime in the 1970s has slowly fallen into decline and often ruin thanks to decades of neglect, especially in America’s poorest and most racially segregated communities, including Gary, Detroit, Camden and Harlem. Many of these structures were historically significant, built between the late 1880s and the 1920s, but when no budget exists to care for them and entire cities are left behind by economic progress, the forces of nature and decay take over.

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-01-16-am

In a potent visual representation of poverty in America’s urban centers and the loss of historic architectural character via demolition, Chilean-born photographer Camilo José Vergara has spent the last 40+ years documenting the downfall of dozens of structures and city streets. The resulting series, ‘Tracking Time,’ is a time-lapse in slow motion, photographing the same buildings once every few years.

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-01-52-am

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-02-16-am

One old shop in Harlem gets painted several times over, has its stained glass windows knocked out, loses a facade to an ugly garage door and is split up into multiple smaller businesses before finally being boarded over and transformed into a mini-mall-style church in 2014.

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-21-00-am

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-21-08-am \

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-21-22-am

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-21-30-am

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-21-38-am

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-21-50-am

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-22-01-am

A massive brick building in South Bronx becomes modest row houses, while The Ransom Gillis House in Detroit (top) sinks into the ground, its bricks falling in clumps, the roof caving in, ivy and trees taking over. It’s almost completely obscured by greenery before a restoration brings it back to its former glory.

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-00-54-am

But other stories aren’t so positive, since people care more about mansions than they do about public housing projects, row houses, and modest residential neighborhoods. Occasionally, Vergara ventures inside to show us that even though the facades still look beautiful, like that of the former Camden Free Public Library, the interiors are utterly destroyed.

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-10-30-am

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-10-40-am

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-11-08-am

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-11-24-am

screen-shot-2016-11-18-at-10-11-54-am

It can be a heartbreaking journey but also a fascinating one, watching some of these structures remain the same for many years while the world changes around them before transforming into something new. And some do manage to endure.

Share on Facebook





[ By SA Rogers in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Evolution of Decay: Watch American Buildings Fall Into Ruin Over 40+ Years

Posted in Creativity

 

Odd Glory: A Salute To Offbeat American Flag Art

16 Oct

[ By Steve in Art & Drawing & Digital & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

american-flag-art-1c

America‘s stars & stripes flag evokes different feelings in different people, such as artists whose creative expression is displayed via Old Glory.

american-flag-art-1b

american-flag-art-1a

Visual artist Dave Cole created “Memorial Flag” from roughly 18,000 plastic toy soldiers and lots of red, white and blue paint. The work was displayed at the 21c Museum in Durham, NC in 2005, where it was given a place of honor as the first artwork visitors to the museum would encounter.

Too Big To FAILE

american-flag-art-2a

american-flag-art-2b

This striking zig-zag flag was painted by street-art collaborative FAILE for the Underbelly Project, held at an abandoned Brooklyn subway station in the summer of 2010. FAILE was one of 103 street artists from all over the world who participated in the unusual art exhibition – unusual because it was (a) illegal and (b) closed the very same night it opened because of (a).

“More Barn!”

american-flag-art-3a

american-flag-art-3b

Call it a case of advertising patriotism: a billboard in Wingdale (Dutchess County), New York now serves as a huge, unmoving flag made from painted wood slats and hundreds of round drawer knobs. Someone somewhere is having a LOT of trouble getting dressed in the morning.

Islamerica

american-flag-art-4

“Prayer Rug for America” by Arab-American artist Helen Zughaib is on display at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History & Culture. The work is “an Islamic prayer rug fashioned with the colors and the stripes of the United States flag,” explains Associate Curator Asantewa Boakyewa, “and her interpretation or take on it is really that this is a painting for healing.”

Next Page – Click Below to Read More:
Odd Glory A Salute To Offbeat American Flag Art

Share on Facebook





[ By Steve in Art & Drawing & Digital & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Odd Glory: A Salute To Offbeat American Flag Art

Posted in Creativity

 

15 Photographs from Ed Ruscha and the Great American West

16 Jul

I had a wonderful opportunity to attend the press preview on Thursday for the new exhibition “Ed Ruscha and the Great American West,” which opens today and runs through October 9th at the de Young Museum in San Francisco.

Ed Ruscha has long been a hero of mine. With my own photography focusing on the American Road and my background growing up in Los Angeles, so much of Ruscha’s work has always rung true to me personally and I’ve felt a certain sort of affinity with it. Gas stations, neon signs, old swimming pools, and the images of a uniquely American experience, fill the current Ruscha exhibition. Mixed in with these beautiful, nostalgic and iconic images are the words that further explain this modern life: “Honey . . . . I Twisted Through More Damned Traffic to Get Here,” “God Knows Where,” “Slobberin Drunk at the Palomino” I remember back in high school or was it college once watching X, or maybe the Blasters or the Knitters perform back at North Hollywood’s Palomino, my memory is hazy and alcohol likely was involved.

“In 1956, at the age of 18, Ed Ruscha left his home in Oklahoma and drove a 1950 Ford sedan to Los Angeles, where he hoped to attend art school. His trip roughly followed the fabled Route 66 through the Southwest, which featured many of the sights—auto repair shops, billboards, and long stretches of roadway punctuated by telephone poles—that would provide him with artistic subjects for decades to come.” This may be all the inducement you need to read to get you to this show.

Here are 15 photographs that I took on Thursday at the new exhibit representing my own interpretation.

Standard

Every Building on the Sunset Strip

A Particular Kind of Heaven

Slobberin Drunk at the Palomino

Honey . . . . I Twisted Through More Damn Traffic to Get Here

Hollywood

Poolside, Series of Nine Photographs

God Knows Where

Burning Gas Station

Hollywood, 19698

La Brea, Sunset, Orange, De Longpre

Texas

Ed Ruscha

15 Photos from Ed Ruscha and the Great American West-9

Ed Ruscha and the Great American West Exhibition Store

Complete 15 photo set here, but everything usually looks better on Ello. ?

More Ruscha here.

More de Young Museum here.


Thomas Hawk Digital Connection

 
Comments Off on 15 Photographs from Ed Ruscha and the Great American West

Posted in Photography

 

American Idle: 12 Weird & Wacky Drive-Thru Businesses

15 May

[ By Steve in Culture & History & Travel. ]

drive-thru-0
Drive-thru is all about fast food, fast service & fast company though getting what you want without ever leaving your ride can get a little weird at times.

drive-thru-1a

drive-thru-1b

Drinking and gunplay: two things that should never be done in a hurry, not to mention together. That’s what makes “Double Shot Liquor & Guns Drive Thru” so disturbingly delightful. While far from being the only drive-thru booze & boomstick emporium – think about THAT, if you dare – the Schulenburg, Texas business stands out thanks to its creative name and the ever-changing messages on its sign.

Mourning Commute

drive-thru-2a

drive-thru-2c

It’s not just life in the fast lane anymore. Sure, funerals can be uncomfortable and “viewings” are a tad creepy. That’s still no excuse for- er, actually it IS an excuse for drive-thru windows at funeral homes! Obviously there’s some demand for this feature, as the Paradise Funeral Chapel in Saginaw, Michigan has drive-thru counterparts in California, South Carolina and Virginia. When drivers pull up to the bulletproof glass (why bulletproof?) window, a motion sensor draws back the curtains allowing mourners to pay their final respects to the en-casketed loved one. Would you like flies with that?

Fastest Cash

drive-thru-3a

We’ll bet this is one of Chumlee’s ideas. If you’re looking to hock the family jewels on your way outta Dodge, then Dean’s Drive-Thru Pawn Shop in Oklahoma City is your one-stop-shop for a quick (and hopefully lucrative) getaway. All bets are off, however, if your clever plan involves driving in and pawning your car.

Fool Injection

drive-thru-4a

drive-thru-4b

A tattoo may be forever but ain’t nobody got time for that. Good thing there’s Outlaw Tattoo, your Route 66 headquarters for while-u-wait permanent body illustration. At least there was – the Tucumcari, New Mexico landmark appears to have been driven out of business, possibly by dissatisfied customers who own rough-idling vehicles. Kudos to Todd Longwood of A Love Of Two Brains for exposing this dist-inked drive-thru concept.

drive-thru-4c

Oh, and for those who feel drive-thru tattooing isn’t too far of a stretch… yeah, what could possibly go wrong?

Next Page – Click Below to Read More:
American Idle 12 Weird Wacky Drive Thru Businesses

Share on Facebook





[ By Steve in Culture & History & Travel. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on American Idle: 12 Weird & Wacky Drive-Thru Businesses

Posted in Creativity

 

Like father, like son: Hawkeye Huey’s knee-high portraits of the American West

18 Oct

Hawkeye Huey’s photos don’t follow traditional photography conventions of composition or exposure. They’re often blurry, cut off subjects, and use hard flash. The National Geographic-represented photographer is launching his first photo book with a little help from a Kickstarter campaign and a lot of help from his partner in crime – his dad, Aaron Huey. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Like father, like son: Hawkeye Huey’s knee-high portraits of the American West

Posted in Uncategorized