realitybitesartblog

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Thursday, 20 January 2011

Bite 43: William Henry Fox Talbot - The Open Door, 1843

Posted on January 20, 2011 by niten
The Open Door, 1843
This is the birth of photography as an art form. Plate 5 from Talbot's groundbreaking photobook (one of the first ever) The Pencil of Nature - an apt descriptor for the new medium - he explained the work as an example "of the early beginnings of a new art." 

The first to see this potential, Talbot invented the calotype photographic process in England simultaneously with Niépce and Dageurre's invention in France. Although it was not blessed with the same initial success as the daguerreotype, it can be seen as perhaps a more foundational invention in the history of photography. Being a negative/positive process it was possible to create countless images from the initial negative thus becoming the basis for almost all succeeding processes. 

With The Open Door Talbot is not only exploring the capabilities of his new invention - "especially useful for naturalists since one can copy the most difficult things, for instance crystallization's and minute parts of plants, with great detail" - but he is also specifically emulating seventeenth-century Dutch paintings of scenes from everyday life. Photo-historian Larry Schaaf points out that the photograph draws on the doorway as a traditional symbol of the passage between life and light, and death and darkness. 

The broom is positioned diagonally against the doorway. The deep darkness of the interior, with only a hint of light from a window, emphasises a mystery and ambiguity.

Talbot has clearly taken deep consideration over the image's composition, and even the time of day for the negative to be exposed to increase contrast and utilise shadow as an aesthetic element - parallel to the broom - as well as to bring out texture in the door.

Although certainly relying heavily on the medium of painting - as much early photography which aspired to art did - The Open Door none-the-less represents the beginning of an ongoing exploration and tension within the medium over the relationship between photography and the history of art.

Sources:
Mary Warner Marien, Photography: A Cultural History, Lawrence King, 2002.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in black and white, England, history of photography, photo, photography | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Bite 47: Claude Cahun - Que Me Veux-Tu? (What Do You Want From Me?), 1928
    Que Me Veux-Tu? (What Do You Want From Me?), 1928 André Breton, founder of the Surrealist movement, called her “one of the most curious spi...
  • Bite 20: Duane Michals - The House I Once Called Home, 2003
    The House I Once Called Home , 2003 The raw material of photography is light and time. Each photograph then, although appearing solid, conta...
  • Bite 118: George Segal - The Restaurant Window, 1967
    The Restaurant Window , 1967, mixed media, 244 x 351 x 175 cm, Museum Ludwig, Cologne An Edward Hopper painting  become sculpture, the lonel...

Categories

  • abstraction
  • American Realism
  • animals
  • Argentina
  • art history
  • Baroque
  • Beat Generation
  • Biblical
  • black and white
  • book
  • book shop
  • books
  • bookshop
  • bookstore
  • Chile
  • colour
  • Conceptual Art
  • contemporary art
  • death
  • Denmark
  • drawing
  • England
  • France
  • Funk
  • gay
  • gender
  • genre painting
  • Germany
  • Greece
  • history of photography
  • Impressionism
  • installation
  • Italy
  • Korea
  • LA
  • landscape
  • literature
  • locality
  • London
  • lyrics
  • Medieval
  • Mexico
  • mixed-media
  • Modern Art
  • museums
  • music
  • myth
  • Nabis
  • Neo-Classicism
  • Neolithic
  • Netherlands
  • New York
  • New Zealand
  • non-western art
  • nude
  • NYC
  • Op Art
  • painting
  • Paris
  • pastel
  • Performance Art
  • personal
  • photo
  • photo journalism
  • photography
  • poetry
  • Pop Art
  • portrait
  • Post-Colonialism
  • Pre-Raphaelite
  • prehistoric
  • public art
  • quotation
  • quote
  • Realism
  • Renaissance
  • Romanticism
  • Samoa
  • sculpture
  • self portrait
  • Spain
  • still life
  • Sublime
  • Surrealism
  • Tahiti
  • tapestry
  • travel
  • USA
  • video
  • war

Blog Archive

  • February 2012 (2)
  • January 2012 (9)
  • December 2011 (1)
  • November 2011 (3)
  • September 2011 (3)
  • August 2011 (9)
  • July 2011 (5)
  • June 2011 (14)
  • May 2011 (18)
  • April 2011 (17)
  • March 2011 (16)
  • February 2011 (21)
  • January 2011 (24)
  • December 2010 (8)
Powered by Blogger.

Search This Blog

Report Abuse

  • Home

About Me

niten
View my complete profile