Niepce in England

  • Published 1st August 2011
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  • Arches, 1827 (c) The Royal Photographic Society Collection held at The National Media Museum
  • Starts: 1pm on 14 October 2011
    Finishes: 2pm on 14 October 2011
    Venue: The Royal Society, London

    Speaker: Philippa Wright, National Media Museum

    In October 2010 the National Media Museum hosted the 'Niépce in England' Conference where they could announce and share with the photographic, conservation and scientific communities the ground breaking findings which had been discovered during the collaborative research partnership between the National Media Museum (NMeM) and the Getty Conservation Institute (GCI).

    The aim of the project is to record the ‘signature’ of every photographic process and the variants throughout the history of photography. Within the National Photography Collection at the NMeM are three early examples of photography by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce and there is no better place to start on a project than at the beginning.

    This new research places Niépce in his rightful place within the history of photography as it revealed new exciting evidence about the examples of photography which Niépce had brought to England to show the Royal Society of London in 1827. Photo historians had always assumed, incorrectly, that the examples Niépce brought were examples of his Heliographic process. However, scientific analysis revealed that the NMeM has examples of three different photographic processes by Niépce.

    Booking for this lunchtime lecture will open later this summer - meanwhile please mark your diaries and keep an eye on the website!


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