Six Gentlemen, Edinburgh
Artist
David Octavius Hill
and (Scottish, 1802–1870)
Artist
Robert Adamson
(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, MAOn View
Not on view