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Six Gentlemen, Edinburgh
Six Gentlemen, Edinburgh
Image © Worcester Art Museum, all rights reserved

Six Gentlemen, Edinburgh

Artist (Scottish, 1802–1870)
Artist (Scottish, 1821–1848)
Date1845
Mediumsalted paper print from calotype negative
Dimensions23.5 x 27.6 cm (9 1/4 x 10 7/8 in.)
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineGift of Mrs. Roger Kinnicutt
Object number1966.50
Label TextThe calotype, a negative-positive process patented in 1841 by William Henry Fox Talbot (1800–1877), takes its name from the Greek word for beauty, kalos. Hill, a painter and secretary of the Royal Scottish Academy, employed the new photographic technique to make portrait studies as a preliminary step in creating a monumental work in oils. The painting (now in the collection of the Free Church of Scotland) commemorates a church convention in 1843 that severed ties with the British Crown to found the Free Church of Scotland. Hill sought the collaboration of Adamson, a Saint Andrews calotypist, to photograph the individual church delegates- among them the professor and one of the five ministers shown here. This "indoor" scene was actually staged outdoors to utilize sunlight for making the one- to two-minute exposure required to produce a satisfactory paper negative. It was one of fifteen hundred photographs the two artists took during a five-year period- including portraits, architectural subjects, and seaside scenes- before their partnership ended with Adamson's death in 1848.ProvenanceMrs. Roger Kinnicutt, Worcester, MA
On View
Not on view
Mr. and Mrs. Chalmers
David Octavius Hill
1840–1870
Hungerford Suspension Bridge, London
William Henry Fox Talbot
about 1845
Charles Greeley Loring Farmstead
Samuel Masury
about 1855
Highland Hut, Loch Katrine
William Henry Fox Talbot
1844
Trichonopoly, India
Linnaeus Tripe
1858, published in 1860
Loch Katrine
William Henry Fox Talbot
about 1845
View of Boston Common
Albert Sands Southworth
1850s
Tontine Crescent, Boston
John Adams Whipple
about 1857
Longfellow House, Harvard, Cambridge
George Kendall Warren
about 1861
College House, Harvard Square
George Kendall Warren
about 1860–1861