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Cyanotype

The cyanotype (from Ancient Greek κυάνεος - kuáneos, "dark blue" + τύπος - túpos, "mark, impression, type") is a slow-reacting, economical photographic printing formulation sensitive to a limited near ultraviolet and blue light spectrum, the range 300 nm to 400 nm known as UVA radiation.[1] It produces a cyan-blue print used for art as monochrome imagery applicable on a range of supports, and for reprography in the form of blueprints. For any purpose, the process usually uses two chemicals: ferric ammonium citrate or ferric ammonium oxalate, and potassium ferricyanide, and only water to develop and fix. Announced in 1842, it is still in use.

A cyanotype of algae by 19th century botanist Anna Atkins
Sir John Herschel (1842) Experimental cyanotype of an unidentified engraving of a lady with a harp, Museum of the History of Science
Architectural drawing blueprint, Canada, 1936
Cyanotype postcard, Racine, Wis., c. 1910

History Edit

The cyanotype was discovered,[2] and named thus, by Sir John Herschel who in 1842 published his investigation of light on iron compounds,[3] expecting that photochemical reactions would reveal, in form visible to the human eye, the infrared extreme of the electromagnetic spectrum detected by his father and the ultra-violet or 'actinic' rays that had been discovered in 1801 by Johann Ritter. Though Döbereiner[4] had published in 1831 in German on the light-sensitivity of ferric oxalate,[5] of which Herschel became aware during his visit to Hamburg, it is too lightly toned to form a satisfactory image and would require a second reaction to make a permanent print.[6]

Alfred Smee had in 1840 used electrochemistry to isolate a pure form of potassium ferricyanide,[7] which he sent to Herschel whose innovation was to use the ammonium iron(III) citrate or tartrate, then commercially available as an iron tonic and also introduced to him by Smee, for photographic purpose. He mixed the ammonium ferric citrate in a 20% aqueous solution, with 16% of the potassium ferricyanide, to make the sensitizer for coating plain paper. Exposed to sunlight, the ferric salt is reduced then combines with the ferricyanide to yield ferric ferrocyanide; Prussian blue (also known as Turnbull's blue, or Berlin Blue in Germany).[8] Intensifying and fixing is achieved simply by rinsing the print in water in which unexposed sensitizer and reaction products are readily soluble.

Anna Atkins, a friend of the Herschel family, over 1843–61 and with the assistance of Anne Dixon, hand-printed several albums of botanical and textile specimens, especially Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions,[9] effectively the world's first photographically-illustrated books.[10] After the Ross Antarctic Expedition (1839–1843) John Davis, artist and naturalist on the expedition, made or commissioned some cyanotypes in 1848 from seaweeds collected on the voyage.[11] Also in the Antipodes, Herbert Dobbie in imitation of Atkins produced a book New Zealand ferns: 148 varieties, but with double-sided pages of cyanotype prints, in 1880.[12]

John Mercer in the 1850s used the process for printing photographs onto cotton textiles and discovered means of toning the cyanotype violet, green, brown, red, or black.[8]

As with all of his photographic inventions, Herschel did not patent his cyanotype process. Chemist George Thomas Fisher Jr. quickly disseminated information on the new medium internationally in his popular 1843 fifty-page manual Photogenic manipulation, containing plain instructions in the theory and practice of the arts of photography: calotype, cyanotype, ferrotype, chrysotype, anthotype, daguerreotype, and thermography,[13] which the following year was translated into German and Dutch. The medium was immediately taken up and perfected by notable photographic practitioners of the time, including William Henry Fox Talbot[14] and Henry Bosse. The latter in making fine presentation albums of bridges and structural steel, foresaw an appropriate effect in colour: the intense blues of his refined cyanotypes from large glass plates were printed on fine French paper 37 cm x 43.6 cm, watermarked Johannot et Cie. Annonay, aloe's satin and leather bound.[15][16][17]

Commercial use came only in 1872, the year after Herschel's death. Marion and Company of Paris were first to market the cyanotype, under the proprietary name of "Ferro-prussiate", for reprography of plans and technical drawings and to advantage due to its low cost and simplicity of processing which required only water. In this application and with the manufacture of blueprint papers, it remained the dominant reprographic process until the 1940s.[8] During the 217-day Siege of Mafeking of the town of Mafeking (Mafikeng) in South Africa during the Second Boer War from October 1899, the process was used to print stamps and banknotes.[1]

On the other hand the simple technology of the cyanotype remained accessible in the non-industrial realm and contributed to folk art; Francois Brunet notes the cyanotypes on cloth used by American home quilt-makers after 1880,[18] and Geoffrey Batchen cites thirty or more early cyanotyped family snapshots on cloth, sewn into pillow slips or quilts, in the collection of Eastman House.[8] Sandra Sider perpetuates this tradition in her own quilt making and as a proponent for increased museum acquisitions of Art Quilts.[19]

The cyanotype produced negatives, reversing the darks and lights of the image or object exposed on it, but Herschel also contrived a version, though more complex, to produce positives which he hoped would aid in his ambition to achieve images of full natural colour. Its difficulties were overcome by Henri Pellet in 1877 in his gum arabic iron cyanofer direct positive photographic tracing method,[6][20] which he commercialised.[21]

Process Edit

Herschel's formula and method Edit

In a typical procedure, equal volumes of an 8.1% (w/v) solution of potassium ferricyanide and a 20% solution of ferric ammonium citrate are mixed. The overall contrast of the sensitizer solution can be increased with the addition of approximately 6 drops of 1% (w/v) solution potassium dichromate for every 2 ml of sensitizer solution.[citation needed]

This mildly photosensitive solution is then applied to a receptive surface (such as paper or cloth) and allowed to dry in a dark place. Cyanotypes can be printed on any support capable of soaking up the iron solution. Although watercolor paper is a preferred medium, cotton, wool and even gelatin sizing on nonporous surfaces have been used. Care should be taken to avoid alkaline-buffered papers, which degrade the image over time.

An image can be produced by exposing sensitised paper to a source of ultraviolet light (such as sunlight) as a contact print. The combination of UV light and the citrate reduces the iron(III) to iron(II). This is followed by a complex reaction of the iron(II) with ferricyanide. The result is an insoluble, blue pigment (ferric ferrocyanide) known as Prussian blue.[22] The exposure time varies widely, from a few seconds in strong direct sunlight, to 10–20 minute exposures on a dull day.

After exposure, the paper is developed by washing in cold running water: the water-soluble iron(III) salts are washed away. The parts that were exposed to ultraviolet turn blue as the non-water-soluble Prussian blue pigment remains in the paper. This is what gives the print its typical blue color.[22] The blue color darkens upon drying.

Improved formula Edit

The ingredients have remained mostly unchanged since its inception in 1840.[23] In 1994 Mike Ware improved on Herschel's formula with ammonium iron(III) oxalate, also known as ferric ammonium oxalate, to replace the variable and unreliable ammonium ferric citrate.[24] It has the advantages of being made up as a convenient single stock solution with a good shelf-life that does not nourish mould growth. The solution is well-absorbed by paper fibres, so it does not pool on the surface or result in a 'tackiness' which may adhere to negatives. The paper better retains the pigment, with little of the Prussian blue image being lost in the washing stage, and exposure is shorter (ca. 4-8 times) than the traditional process. The cyanotype solution, even once its excess is washed off with water, remains photo-sensitive to some degree. A print that has been stored or displayed in bright light will eventually fade, the light causing a chemical reaction that changes the Prussian blue of the cyanotype to white. However, this process can be reversed by storing the cyanotypes in darkness. This will return them to their original vibrancy.[25]

Different composition levels of ferric ammonium citrate (or oxalate) and potassium ferricyanide will result in a variety of effects in the final cyanotypes. Mixtures of half ferric ammonium citrate and half potassium ferricyanide will produce a medium, even shade of blue that is most commonly seen in a cyanotype. A mix of one third ferric ammonium citrate and two thirds potassium ferricyanide will produce a darker blue, and a more high-contrast final print.[26]

Disadvantages of the Ware formula are a higher cost, more complicated preparation, and a level of toxicity.[27]

Printmaking Edit

The simplest kind of cyanotype print is a photogram, made by arranging objects on sensitised paper. Fresh or pressed plants are a typical subject but any opaque to translucent object will create an image. A sheet of glass will press flat objects into close contact with the paper, resulting in a sharp image. Otherwise, three-dimensional objects or less than perfectly flat ones will create a more or less blurred image depending on the incidence and breadth of the light source.

A variant of photograms are chemigrams. The cyanotype solution is applied, poured or sprayed irregularly. A variant of action painting results from repeated washing and application, placing objects on top.

More sophisticated prints can be made from artwork or photographic images on transparent or translucent media. The cyanotype process reverses light and dark, so a negative original is required to print as a positive image. Large format photographic negatives or transparent digital negatives can produce images with a full tonal range, or lithographic film can be used to create high-contrast images.

The cyanotype may be combination-printed with gumoil,[28] or with a gum bichromate image, in which, for full-colour imaging from colour separations, it may form the blue layer; or it may be combined with a hand-painted or hand-drawn drawn layer.[29]

Toning Edit

 
Cyanotype, toned with tannin, tea and coffee, left side: bleached with washing soda before toning, picture of flower made with Image Creator

In a cyanotype, blue is usually the desired color. However, a variety of alternative effects can be achieved. These fall into three categories: reducing, intensifying, and toning.[30] It is common to bleach prints before toning them, but also possible to achieve different effects by toning prints without bleaching.[31]

  • Bleaching processes are ways of decreasing the intensity of the blue. Sodium carbonate, ammonia, borax, Dektol photographic developer and other chemicals can be used to do this. Household bleach is also effective, but tends to destroy the paper base. How much and how long to bleach depends on the image content, emulsion thickness and what kind of toning is being used. When using a bleaching agent it is important to control the bleaching process by washing in clean water as soon as the desired effect is achieved, to prevent loss of detail in the highlights.[32]
  • Intensifying processes will strengthen the blue effect. Chemicals used are hydrogen peroxide or mild acidic substances: citric acid, lemon juice, vinegar or acetic acid etc.[30] These can also be used to speed up the oxidation process that creates the blue pigment.
  • Toning processes are used to change the color of the iron oxide in the print.[30] The color change varies with the reagent used. A variety of agents can be used, including various types of tea, coffee, wine, urine, tannic acid or pyrogallic acid, resulting in tones varying from brown to black.[33] Most toning processes will to some extent tint the white parts of a print.

Long-term preservation Edit

One of the most robust of Victorian print technologies, cyanotypes are quite stable on their own, but in contrast to most historical and present-day processes, the prints do not react well to basic environments.[34] As a result, it is not advised to store or present the print in chemically buffered museum board, as this makes the image fade. Another unusual characteristic of the cyanotype is its regenerative behavior: prints that have faded due to prolonged exposure to light can often be significantly restored to their original tone by simply temporarily storing them in a dark environment.[35][36]

Cyanotypes on cloth are permanent but must be washed by hand with non-phosphate soap[37] so as to not turn the cyan to yellow.

Cyanotype in artistic practice Edit

Artistic potential Edit

The cyanotype's success as a form of artistic expression lies in its capacity for manipulation or distortion.[38] It produces distinctive effects and is versatile,[27] enabling prints to be made on a wide variety of surfaces,[24] including paper, wood, fabric,[39] glass, Perspex, bone, shell and eggshell, plaster and ceramics,[26][40] and at any scale; to date 2017, the largest is 276.64 m2 (2977.72 ft2), created by Stefanos Tsakiris in Thessaloniki, Greece, on 18 September 2017.[41] Robin Hill in 2001 exhibited Sweet Everyday, a 30.5 m (100 ft) cyanotype enwrapping Lennon, Weinberg, Inc.'s Soho gallery, and evoking wavy brushstrokes by placing ordinary shopping bags on photo-sensitive paper exposed to light.[42] For photographic negatives or positives enlargement directly onto the emulsion is not feasible due to the low sensitivity of the emulsion (except with a solar enlarger), so requires contact printing at 1:1 ratio. The low sensitivity permits progress to be inspected in a printing frame during exposure. Consequently and because of its long exposure scale it suits most negatives whether of high or low contrast. As a recognisably 19th century technology, artists like John Dugdale use it to evoke, or to critique, Victorian aesthetics and social constructs.[25]

The artist is not restricted to the reproduction of existing photographic negatives. Prints can be made of three-dimensional objects, utilising the ability of the objects to be placed on top of the photosensitive material. Once exposed to light, the final print is of an outline of an item[26] with internal detail where they allow light, depending on their relative transparency and exposure, to filter through; Anna Atkin's botanical cyanotypes sharply register the more transparent segments of a petal or leaf.[43] An object original, used to make a cyanotype photogram, including the human figure for example, is reproduced at actual size. Robert Rauschenberg's and Susan Weil's collaborative cyanotypes, including Untitled (Double Rauschenberg), c. 1950[44] were made by both artists lying down, hands held, on a large piece of photosensitive paper (treated with cyanotype chemicals). The resulting prints of their bodies in various poses are currently part of the Museum of Modern Art's permanent collection.[38] In France, from the end of the 1970s, Nancy Wilson-Pajic made cyanotype photograms of everything from a broken windshield to herself (Falling Angels), and eventually several long series of museum collections and of Haute-Couture robes by Christian Lacroix and other designers. The results have been shown all over the world and are in major institutions and public collections.

The powerful cyan hue may evolve a spiritual or emotional response as in the cosmic imagery of Carolyn Lewens[45] and naturally associates symbolically with sea or sky.[46] As German photographer Thomas Kellner notes of his 1997 Cubist multi-pinhole portraits of porcelain dolls; "I am specially happy with the blue colour in this series as the blue has a different depth in the background than a black print. Blue is still infinite, whereas black usually has the character of ending."[47] The negative form may be disorienting or surreal;[26] while white is often used to frame or highlight a central subject in many artistic media, the opposite may be true in the cyanotype, requiring the artist to adapt their ideas to the effect.[25]

Equally important is the expressive potential of the application of emulsion using brush, squeegee, roller or cloth, or by stamping, for calligraphic effect.[26]

Artists Edit

Nineteenth century Edit

 
Self portrait of Linley Sambourne modelling (10 January 1895) for Punch cartoon 'Quite English, You Know!

Britain Edit

Anna Atkins, who was also an accomplished watercolorist, in her cyanotype botanical specimens, is considered the first to make art with the medium[48] in which the sea plants appear suspended in an oceanic blue,[49] and while her hundreds of images satisfy a scientific curiosity, their aesthetic quality has served as inspiration for cyanotype artists ever since.[43][50]

Cyanotype photography was popular in Victorian England, but became less popular as photography improved.[51] By the mid-1800s few photographers continued to exploit its accessible qualities and at the Great Exhibition of 1851, despite extensive displays of photographic technology, only a single example of the cyanotype process was included.[1][52] Peter Henry Emerson exemplified the British attitude that cyanotypes were unworthy of purchase or exhibition with his assertion that: "No one but a vandal would print a landscape in red, or in cyanotype."[53]

Consequently, the process devolved to the proofing of domestic negatives by hobbyist photographers and to postcards, though another British scientist, Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society[54] Washington Teasdale,[55] delivered hundreds of lectures throughout his lifetime and was among the first to illustrate them with lantern slides, and, up to 1890, to record his experiments and specimens, used the cyanotype, a collection of which is held at the Museum of the History of Science, Oxford.[56]

Edwin Linley Sambourne used cyanotypes as an archive of reference images for his Punch cartoons.[57]

France Edit

Curators and practitioners in France embraced the process. Caricaturist, illustrator, writer and portrait photographer Bertall (born Charles Albert, vicomte d' Arnoux, comte de Limoges-Saint-Saëns) as partner of Hippolyte Bayard was commissioned in the 1860s to make cyanotype portraits from glass negatives for the Société d'Ethnographie for their publication Collection anthropologique.[58] While artistic in execution they also satisfy with the scientific interests of the group as each subject is photographed nude with front, back and profile views, not in the field but in his studio. The project also takes advantage of the ease of making multiples of cyanotypes for the publication[59] Henri Le Secq's cyanotypes, which he made after he gave up photography after 1856 to continue painting and collecting art, were reprints of his famous works and made around 1870 as he was afraid of possible loss due to fading. He gave the reprints dates of the original negatives, some of which are still in good condition.[1] They are well-represented in French collections.[8] From the early 1850s through the 1870s Corot, with associated artists working in and near the town Barbizon adopted the hand-drawn cliché-verre, and though most were printed on salted or albumenized paper, some used the cyanotype.[60]

United States Edit

In the US the medium persevered into the 20th century. Eadweard Muybridge made cyanotype contact prints of his animal locomotion sequences,[61] and Edward Curtis' ethnographic cyanotypes of native North Americans are preserved in the George Eastman House.

Pictorialism Edit

 
Edward Steichen (1904) Midnight Lake George or Road into the Valley – Moonrise.
 
Bertha Evelyn Jaques, Untitled, c. 1900, cyanotype, NGA 136408

Pictorialists, throughout Europe and other western countries, in efforts to have photography accepted as an art form, emphasised handcraft in printing, in imitation of painting and drawing, and drew on Symbolist subject matter and themes. Many of the practitioners were respected amateurs whose work was rewarded in a system of international 'salons' run by such organisations as the Camera Club of New York, and competition promoted an elevated level of technical experimentation with all of the then-current processes, such as calotypy, cyanotypy, gum printing, platinum printing, bromoil and Autochrome colour.[62]

Clarence White's impeccable domestic and plein-air pictures are indebted in their bold composition to his contemporaries the painters Thomas Wilmer Dewing, William Merritt Chase and John White Alexander. His labor-intensive process entailed developing the negatives then making tests on cyanotype, playing with dimensions, proportions, and other variables, before making a print in platinum, which he then meticulously and expressively retouched. Alfred Steiglitz in White's portrait of him (1907) held in Princeton University Art Museum, appears gloweringly critical in the cyanotype print preserved there.[63]

At the turn of the century, painter-photographer Edward Steichen, then associated with Alfred Steiglitz who promoted the Photo-Secession and Pictorialism through his Camera Work (1903–1917) produced prints of Midnight Lake George now held in The Alfred Stieglitz Collection: Photographs at the Art Institute of Chicago where in 2007 scientific examination of the prints and his records concluded that cyanotype had been incorporated in their predominant gum bichromate over platinum production.[64] Steichen argued provocatively in the first issue of Camera Work that "every photograph is a fake from start to finish, a purely impersonal, unmanipulated photograph being practically impossible."[64]

Photo-Secessionist Franco-American Paul Burty-Havilland, involved through marriage with the Lalique company, evinces a Japonisme in his moody cyanotype portraits and nudes made between 1898–1920.[65] Another American Pictorialist Fred Holland Day made cyanotypes of youths, nude or in sailor suits, in 1911, that are held in the Library of Congress,[66] and French artist Charles-François Jeandel printed his erotic imagery of bound women in his painting workshop in Paris and then in Charente 1890–1900.[67]

The more traditional American printmaker Bertha Jaques, aligned with the antimodernist views of the late Victorian Arts and Crafts movement, from 1894 produced more than a thousand cyanotype photographs of wildflowers.[68]

Impressionism Edit

American artist Theodore Robinson painted in Giverny 1887–1892, contemporaneous with Monet of whom he made a portrait in cyanotype, and of the haystacks that Monet famously painted. He noted that "Painting directly from nature is difficult as things do not remain the same; the camera helps to retain the picture in your mind."[69] He often drew a grid over his cyanotypes or albumen prints to assist transferring the composition, with compositional amendments, onto canvas, though conscious that "I must beware of the photo, get what I can of it and then go." His photographic imagery is held in the Canajoharie Library and Art Gallery and the Terra Foundation for the Arts.[69][8]

Modernism Edit

Arthur Wesley Dow's modernist approach was influential on the Pictorialists in the eloquently simple compositions of his New England environment, like Pine Tree (1895),[70] a cyanotype, related to his interest, while studying in France, in the flat, decorative qualities of Japanese art and that of Les Nabis.[71]

In Europe, Josef Sudek, the 'Poet of Prague' sometimes employed the cyanotype to impressionist effect during the early Modernist period.

Milan-born photographer, printmaker, painter, set designer and experimental film-maker, Luigi Veronesi, well-informed about the international debate on abstraction, was impressed with the abstract potential of the photogram. He participated in a 1934 exhibition in Paris with the international group of abstract artists 'Abstraction-Création', through which he met with Fernand Léger. He drew inspiration from Léger's Ballet Mécanique, Surrealism via the Metaphysical painting of Georgio de Chirico, and fellow photographer Giuseppe Cavalli with whom, convinced of the essential 'uselessness' of art, in 1947 he founded a group named La Bussola (The Compass). Influenced by Constructivist theories (and politically aligned with Communism), Veronesi used the cyanotype photogram after 1932 as a means of revealing metaphysical qualities in objects.[72][73]

Late modern Edit

 
Catherine Jansen (1981) The Blue Room, cyanotype on fabric, mixed media.

In a 2008 essay A.D. Coleman perceived a return of the legacy Pictorialist methods being applied in art photography from 1976,[62] a tendency represented in Francesca Woodman's late cyanotypes and in contact prints by Barbara Kasten and Bea Nettles.[74] Weston Naef, curator of photography at the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, in a 1998 New York Times article by critic Lyle Rexer, confirmed that "Looking back at [photography's] pioneers, today's artists see a way to restore expression to an art beguiled by technology," referring to the loss of 'intimacy' in digital imaging to account for artists' attraction to daguerreotypes, tintypes, cyanotypes, stereopticon images, albumen prints, collodion wet plates; all physical and 'hands-on' methods.[75] Artists David McDermott and Peter McGough, who met in the East Village New York art scene of the 1980s, and until 1995 took the phenomenon to the extreme of reconstructing themselves as Victorian gentlemen, adopting the lifestyle and documenting it and their possessions using vintage cameras and materials, first inspired by their discovery of the cyanotype, and dating their contemporary works in the nineteenth century.[76]

Contemporary Edit

 
Indigo XII, Kate Cordsen. Cyanotype on handmade paper

Since 2000 around 10 books, and in growing numbers, are published each year in English in which 'cyanotype' appears in the title, compared to only 95 in total from 1843 to 1999.[77] Though it has been an artform since its inception, the numbers of artists now employing the cyanotype process have burgeoned, and they are not solely photographers. In the book of the 2022 British exhibition Squaring the Circles of Confusion: Neo-Pictorialism in the 21st Century eight contemporary artists: Takashi Arai, Céline Bodin, Susan Derges, David George, Joy Gregory, Tom Hunter, Ian Phillips-McLaren and Spencer Rowell employ the craft of photography for postmodern purpose, including the cyanotype.[78]

International Edit

Many were included in the first American international survey of the cyanotype in 2016; the Worcester Art Museum's Cyanotypes: Photography's Blue Period[46] which displayed uses of the medium that extend well beyond the utilitarian contact-printing of negatives; Annie Lopez stitched together cyanotypes printed on tamale paper to create dresses; Brooke Williams tea-toned her cyanotypes, adjusting their color to accord with her story as a Jamaican American woman; and Hugh Scott-Douglas experimented with photograms and abstraction.

In 2018, the New York Public Library exhibited the work of nineteen contemporary artists who employ the medium. Mounted 175 years after Anna Atkin's first book of cyanotypes, British Algae, the exhibition was titled Anna Atkins Refracted: Contemporary Works.[79]

Amongst others currently working in, or with, cyanotype are;

United States Edit

Christian Marclay who suggests musical scores in his grids of cassette tapes or their unspooling.

Kate Cordsen applies Japanese aesthetics and non-Cartesian perspective in her mural-scale cyanotype landscapes.

Betty Hahn was early to incorporate cyanotype with other art media including hand-painting with embroidery as a feminist statement[80]

Meghann Riepenhoff reprises Anna Atkins by exposing her prepared papers underneath the waves, so light filters through moving sand, shells, and water currents.[46][81]

Canada Edit

Canadian Erin Shirreff translates her sculptural interests into large-scale cyanotype photograms of temporary three-dimensional compositions in her studio with hours-long exposures during which component forms are moved, added or subtracted for transparent effect.[82]

Germany Edit

German artist Marco Breuer abrades cyanotype prints on watercolour paper in representations of the passing of time.

Iceland Edit

Icelandic artist and filmmaker Inga Lísa Middleton employs the cyanotype for nostalgic representations of her homeland, and as a symbolic colour in imagery alerting audiences to an emerging catastrophe in the marine environment.

United Kingdom Edit

British-born American resident Walead Beshty's Barbican Art Gallery installation of 12,000 cyanotype prints traces a visual time line from October 2013 to September 2014 in a work called A Partial Disassembling of an Invention Without a Future: Helter-Skelter and Random Notes in Which the Pulleys and Cogwheels Are Lying Around at Random All Over the Workbench, produced from each object from the artists' studio being exposed on cyanotype-coated found paper, card or wood.

See also Edit

References Edit

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  2. ^ Ware, Mike (1998). "John Herschel's Cyanotype: Invention or Discovery?". History of Photography (Winter 1998). 22 (4): 371–379. doi:10.1080/03087298.1998.10443901.
  3. ^ Herschel, John F. W. (1842). "On the action of the rays of the solar spectrum on vegetable colours, and on some new photographic processes". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 132: 181–214. Bibcode:1842RSPT..132..181H. OCLC 973449546.
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Further reading Edit

  • Atkins, Anna (1985). Sun Gardens: Victorian Photograms. With text by Larry J. Schaaf. New York: Aperture. ISBN 0-89381-203-X.
  • Blacklow, Laura (2000). New Dimensions in Photo Processes: a step by step manual (3rd ed.). Boston: Focal Press. ISBN 0-240-80431-7.
  • Ware, M. (1999). Cyanotype: the history, science and art of photographic printing in Prussian blue. Science Museum, UK. ISBN 1-900747-07-3.
  • Crawford, William (1979). The Keepers of Light. New York: Morgan and Morgan. ISBN 0-87100-158-6.
  • Loos, Ted (February 5, 2016). "Cyanotype: Photography's Blue Period is Making a Comeback". New York Times. Worcester, MA.
  • Tsakiris, Stephanos (September 18, 2017). "Guinness world record Largest cyanotype". Thessaloniki.
  • Herschel, John (1842). "On the Action of the Rays of the Solar Spectrum on Vegetable Colours, and on Some New Photographic Processes". London: Royal Society of London. JSTOR 108152.

External links Edit

  • Mike Ware's New Cyanotype – A new version of the cyanotype that address some of the classical cyanotype's shortcomings as a photographic process.
  • on AlternativePhotography.com
  • Brown, G.E. (1900). "Ferric and heliographic processes". London.
  • "Photographic reproduction processes. A practical treatise of the photo-impressions without silver salts ..." New York, The Scovill & Adams company. 1891.

cyanotype, cyanotype, from, ancient, greek, κυάνεος, kuáneos, dark, blue, τύπος, túpos, mark, impression, type, slow, reacting, economical, photographic, printing, formulation, sensitive, limited, near, ultraviolet, blue, light, spectrum, range, known, radiati. The cyanotype from Ancient Greek kyaneos kuaneos dark blue typos tupos mark impression type is a slow reacting economical photographic printing formulation sensitive to a limited near ultraviolet and blue light spectrum the range 300 nm to 400 nm known as UVA radiation 1 It produces a cyan blue print used for art as monochrome imagery applicable on a range of supports and for reprography in the form of blueprints For any purpose the process usually uses two chemicals ferric ammonium citrate or ferric ammonium oxalate and potassium ferricyanide and only water to develop and fix Announced in 1842 it is still in use A cyanotype of algae by 19th century botanist Anna AtkinsSir John Herschel 1842 Experimental cyanotype of an unidentified engraving of a lady with a harp Museum of the History of ScienceArchitectural drawing blueprint Canada 1936Cyanotype postcard Racine Wis c 1910 Contents 1 History 2 Process 2 1 Herschel s formula and method 2 2 Improved formula 2 3 Printmaking 2 4 Toning 2 5 Long term preservation 3 Cyanotype in artistic practice 3 1 Artistic potential 4 Artists 4 1 Nineteenth century 4 1 1 Britain 4 1 2 France 4 1 3 United States 4 2 Pictorialism 4 3 Impressionism 4 4 Modernism 4 5 Late modern 4 6 Contemporary 4 6 1 International 4 6 2 United States 4 6 3 Canada 4 6 4 Germany 4 6 5 Iceland 4 6 6 United Kingdom 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory EditThe cyanotype was discovered 2 and named thus by Sir John Herschel who in 1842 published his investigation of light on iron compounds 3 expecting that photochemical reactions would reveal in form visible to the human eye the infrared extreme of the electromagnetic spectrum detected by his father and the ultra violet or actinic rays that had been discovered in 1801 by Johann Ritter Though Dobereiner 4 had published in 1831 in German on the light sensitivity of ferric oxalate 5 of which Herschel became aware during his visit to Hamburg it is too lightly toned to form a satisfactory image and would require a second reaction to make a permanent print 6 Alfred Smee had in 1840 used electrochemistry to isolate a pure form of potassium ferricyanide 7 which he sent to Herschel whose innovation was to use the ammonium iron III citrate or tartrate then commercially available as an iron tonic and also introduced to him by Smee for photographic purpose He mixed the ammonium ferric citrate in a 20 aqueous solution with 16 of the potassium ferricyanide to make the sensitizer for coating plain paper Exposed to sunlight the ferric salt is reduced then combines with the ferricyanide to yield ferric ferrocyanide Prussian blue also known as Turnbull s blue or Berlin Blue in Germany 8 Intensifying and fixing is achieved simply by rinsing the print in water in which unexposed sensitizer and reaction products are readily soluble Anna Atkins a friend of the Herschel family over 1843 61 and with the assistance of Anne Dixon hand printed several albums of botanical and textile specimens especially Photographs of British Algae Cyanotype Impressions 9 effectively the world s first photographically illustrated books 10 After the Ross Antarctic Expedition 1839 1843 John Davis artist and naturalist on the expedition made or commissioned some cyanotypes in 1848 from seaweeds collected on the voyage 11 Also in the Antipodes Herbert Dobbie in imitation of Atkins produced a book New Zealand ferns 148 varieties but with double sided pages of cyanotype prints in 1880 12 John Mercer in the 1850s used the process for printing photographs onto cotton textiles and discovered means of toning the cyanotype violet green brown red or black 8 As with all of his photographic inventions Herschel did not patent his cyanotype process Chemist George Thomas Fisher Jr quickly disseminated information on the new medium internationally in his popular 1843 fifty page manual Photogenic manipulation containing plain instructions in the theory and practice of the arts of photography calotype cyanotype ferrotype chrysotype anthotype daguerreotype and thermography 13 which the following year was translated into German and Dutch The medium was immediately taken up and perfected by notable photographic practitioners of the time including William Henry Fox Talbot 14 and Henry Bosse The latter in making fine presentation albums of bridges and structural steel foresaw an appropriate effect in colour the intense blues of his refined cyanotypes from large glass plates were printed on fine French paper 37 cm x 43 6 cm watermarked Johannot et Cie Annonay aloe s satin and leather bound 15 16 17 Commercial use came only in 1872 the year after Herschel s death Marion and Company of Paris were first to market the cyanotype under the proprietary name of Ferro prussiate for reprography of plans and technical drawings and to advantage due to its low cost and simplicity of processing which required only water In this application and with the manufacture of blueprint papers it remained the dominant reprographic process until the 1940s 8 During the 217 day Siege of Mafeking of the town of Mafeking Mafikeng in South Africa during the Second Boer War from October 1899 the process was used to print stamps and banknotes 1 On the other hand the simple technology of the cyanotype remained accessible in the non industrial realm and contributed to folk art Francois Brunet notes the cyanotypes on cloth used by American home quilt makers after 1880 18 and Geoffrey Batchen cites thirty or more early cyanotyped family snapshots on cloth sewn into pillow slips or quilts in the collection of Eastman House 8 Sandra Sider perpetuates this tradition in her own quilt making and as a proponent for increased museum acquisitions of Art Quilts 19 The cyanotype produced negatives reversing the darks and lights of the image or object exposed on it but Herschel also contrived a version though more complex to produce positives which he hoped would aid in his ambition to achieve images of full natural colour Its difficulties were overcome by Henri Pellet in 1877 in his gum arabic iron cyanofer direct positive photographic tracing method 6 20 which he commercialised 21 Process EditHerschel s formula and method Edit In a typical procedure equal volumes of an 8 1 w v solution of potassium ferricyanide and a 20 solution of ferric ammonium citrate are mixed The overall contrast of the sensitizer solution can be increased with the addition of approximately 6 drops of 1 w v solution potassium dichromate for every 2 ml of sensitizer solution citation needed This mildly photosensitive solution is then applied to a receptive surface such as paper or cloth and allowed to dry in a dark place Cyanotypes can be printed on any support capable of soaking up the iron solution Although watercolor paper is a preferred medium cotton wool and even gelatin sizing on nonporous surfaces have been used Care should be taken to avoid alkaline buffered papers which degrade the image over time An image can be produced by exposing sensitised paper to a source of ultraviolet light such as sunlight as a contact print The combination of UV light and the citrate reduces the iron III to iron II This is followed by a complex reaction of the iron II with ferricyanide The result is an insoluble blue pigment ferric ferrocyanide known as Prussian blue 22 The exposure time varies widely from a few seconds in strong direct sunlight to 10 20 minute exposures on a dull day After exposure the paper is developed by washing in cold running water the water soluble iron III salts are washed away The parts that were exposed to ultraviolet turn blue as the non water soluble Prussian blue pigment remains in the paper This is what gives the print its typical blue color 22 The blue color darkens upon drying Improved formula Edit The ingredients have remained mostly unchanged since its inception in 1840 23 In 1994 Mike Ware improved on Herschel s formula with ammonium iron III oxalate also known as ferric ammonium oxalate to replace the variable and unreliable ammonium ferric citrate 24 It has the advantages of being made up as a convenient single stock solution with a good shelf life that does not nourish mould growth The solution is well absorbed by paper fibres so it does not pool on the surface or result in a tackiness which may adhere to negatives The paper better retains the pigment with little of the Prussian blue image being lost in the washing stage and exposure is shorter ca 4 8 times than the traditional process The cyanotype solution even once its excess is washed off with water remains photo sensitive to some degree A print that has been stored or displayed in bright light will eventually fade the light causing a chemical reaction that changes the Prussian blue of the cyanotype to white However this process can be reversed by storing the cyanotypes in darkness This will return them to their original vibrancy 25 Different composition levels of ferric ammonium citrate or oxalate and potassium ferricyanide will result in a variety of effects in the final cyanotypes Mixtures of half ferric ammonium citrate and half potassium ferricyanide will produce a medium even shade of blue that is most commonly seen in a cyanotype A mix of one third ferric ammonium citrate and two thirds potassium ferricyanide will produce a darker blue and a more high contrast final print 26 Disadvantages of the Ware formula are a higher cost more complicated preparation and a level of toxicity 27 Printmaking Edit The simplest kind of cyanotype print is a photogram made by arranging objects on sensitised paper Fresh or pressed plants are a typical subject but any opaque to translucent object will create an image A sheet of glass will press flat objects into close contact with the paper resulting in a sharp image Otherwise three dimensional objects or less than perfectly flat ones will create a more or less blurred image depending on the incidence and breadth of the light source A variant of photograms are chemigrams The cyanotype solution is applied poured or sprayed irregularly A variant of action painting results from repeated washing and application placing objects on top More sophisticated prints can be made from artwork or photographic images on transparent or translucent media The cyanotype process reverses light and dark so a negative original is required to print as a positive image Large format photographic negatives or transparent digital negatives can produce images with a full tonal range or lithographic film can be used to create high contrast images The cyanotype may be combination printed with gumoil 28 or with a gum bichromate image in which for full colour imaging from colour separations it may form the blue layer or it may be combined with a hand painted or hand drawn drawn layer 29 Toning Edit nbsp Cyanotype toned with tannin tea and coffee left side bleached with washing soda before toning picture of flower made with Image CreatorIn a cyanotype blue is usually the desired color However a variety of alternative effects can be achieved These fall into three categories reducing intensifying and toning 30 It is common to bleach prints before toning them but also possible to achieve different effects by toning prints without bleaching 31 Bleaching processes are ways of decreasing the intensity of the blue Sodium carbonate ammonia borax Dektol photographic developer and other chemicals can be used to do this Household bleach is also effective but tends to destroy the paper base How much and how long to bleach depends on the image content emulsion thickness and what kind of toning is being used When using a bleaching agent it is important to control the bleaching process by washing in clean water as soon as the desired effect is achieved to prevent loss of detail in the highlights 32 Intensifying processes will strengthen the blue effect Chemicals used are hydrogen peroxide or mild acidic substances citric acid lemon juice vinegar or acetic acid etc 30 These can also be used to speed up the oxidation process that creates the blue pigment Toning processes are used to change the color of the iron oxide in the print 30 The color change varies with the reagent used A variety of agents can be used including various types of tea coffee wine urine tannic acid or pyrogallic acid resulting in tones varying from brown to black 33 Most toning processes will to some extent tint the white parts of a print Long term preservation Edit One of the most robust of Victorian print technologies cyanotypes are quite stable on their own but in contrast to most historical and present day processes the prints do not react well to basic environments 34 As a result it is not advised to store or present the print in chemically buffered museum board as this makes the image fade Another unusual characteristic of the cyanotype is its regenerative behavior prints that have faded due to prolonged exposure to light can often be significantly restored to their original tone by simply temporarily storing them in a dark environment 35 36 Cyanotypes on cloth are permanent but must be washed by hand with non phosphate soap 37 so as to not turn the cyan to yellow Cyanotype in artistic practice EditArtistic potential Edit The cyanotype s success as a form of artistic expression lies in its capacity for manipulation or distortion 38 It produces distinctive effects and is versatile 27 enabling prints to be made on a wide variety of surfaces 24 including paper wood fabric 39 glass Perspex bone shell and eggshell plaster and ceramics 26 40 and at any scale to date 2017 the largest is 276 64 m2 2977 72 ft2 created by Stefanos Tsakiris in Thessaloniki Greece on 18 September 2017 41 Robin Hill in 2001 exhibited Sweet Everyday a 30 5 m 100 ft cyanotype enwrapping Lennon Weinberg Inc s Soho gallery and evoking wavy brushstrokes by placing ordinary shopping bags on photo sensitive paper exposed to light 42 For photographic negatives or positives enlargement directly onto the emulsion is not feasible due to the low sensitivity of the emulsion except with a solar enlarger so requires contact printing at 1 1 ratio The low sensitivity permits progress to be inspected in a printing frame during exposure Consequently and because of its long exposure scale it suits most negatives whether of high or low contrast As a recognisably 19th century technology artists like John Dugdale use it to evoke or to critique Victorian aesthetics and social constructs 25 The artist is not restricted to the reproduction of existing photographic negatives Prints can be made of three dimensional objects utilising the ability of the objects to be placed on top of the photosensitive material Once exposed to light the final print is of an outline of an item 26 with internal detail where they allow light depending on their relative transparency and exposure to filter through Anna Atkin s botanical cyanotypes sharply register the more transparent segments of a petal or leaf 43 An object original used to make a cyanotype photogram including the human figure for example is reproduced at actual size Robert Rauschenberg s and Susan Weil s collaborative cyanotypes including Untitled Double Rauschenberg c 1950 44 were made by both artists lying down hands held on a large piece of photosensitive paper treated with cyanotype chemicals The resulting prints of their bodies in various poses are currently part of the Museum of Modern Art s permanent collection 38 In France from the end of the 1970s Nancy Wilson Pajic made cyanotype photograms of everything from a broken windshield to herself Falling Angels and eventually several long series of museum collections and of Haute Couture robes by Christian Lacroix and other designers The results have been shown all over the world and are in major institutions and public collections The powerful cyan hue may evolve a spiritual or emotional response as in the cosmic imagery of Carolyn Lewens 45 and naturally associates symbolically with sea or sky 46 As German photographer Thomas Kellner notes of his 1997 Cubist multi pinhole portraits of porcelain dolls I am specially happy with the blue colour in this series as the blue has a different depth in the background than a black print Blue is still infinite whereas black usually has the character of ending 47 The negative form may be disorienting or surreal 26 while white is often used to frame or highlight a central subject in many artistic media the opposite may be true in the cyanotype requiring the artist to adapt their ideas to the effect 25 Equally important is the expressive potential of the application of emulsion using brush squeegee roller or cloth or by stamping for calligraphic effect 26 Artists EditNineteenth century Edit nbsp Self portrait of Linley Sambourne modelling 10 January 1895 for Punch cartoon Quite English You Know Britain Edit Anna Atkins who was also an accomplished watercolorist in her cyanotype botanical specimens is considered the first to make art with the medium 48 in which the sea plants appear suspended in an oceanic blue 49 and while her hundreds of images satisfy a scientific curiosity their aesthetic quality has served as inspiration for cyanotype artists ever since 43 50 Cyanotype photography was popular in Victorian England but became less popular as photography improved 51 By the mid 1800s few photographers continued to exploit its accessible qualities and at the Great Exhibition of 1851 despite extensive displays of photographic technology only a single example of the cyanotype process was included 1 52 Peter Henry Emerson exemplified the British attitude that cyanotypes were unworthy of purchase or exhibition with his assertion that No one but a vandal would print a landscape in red or in cyanotype 53 Consequently the process devolved to the proofing of domestic negatives by hobbyist photographers and to postcards though another British scientist Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society 54 Washington Teasdale 55 delivered hundreds of lectures throughout his lifetime and was among the first to illustrate them with lantern slides and up to 1890 to record his experiments and specimens used the cyanotype a collection of which is held at the Museum of the History of Science Oxford 56 Edwin Linley Sambourne used cyanotypes as an archive of reference images for his Punch cartoons 57 France Edit Curators and practitioners in France embraced the process Caricaturist illustrator writer and portrait photographer Bertall born Charles Albert vicomte d Arnoux comte de Limoges Saint Saens as partner of Hippolyte Bayard was commissioned in the 1860s to make cyanotype portraits from glass negatives for the Societe d Ethnographie for their publication Collection anthropologique 58 While artistic in execution they also satisfy with the scientific interests of the group as each subject is photographed nude with front back and profile views not in the field but in his studio The project also takes advantage of the ease of making multiples of cyanotypes for the publication 59 Henri Le Secq s cyanotypes which he made after he gave up photography after 1856 to continue painting and collecting art were reprints of his famous works and made around 1870 as he was afraid of possible loss due to fading He gave the reprints dates of the original negatives some of which are still in good condition 1 They are well represented in French collections 8 From the early 1850s through the 1870s Corot with associated artists working in and near the town Barbizon adopted the hand drawn cliche verre and though most were printed on salted or albumenized paper some used the cyanotype 60 United States Edit In the US the medium persevered into the 20th century Eadweard Muybridge made cyanotype contact prints of his animal locomotion sequences 61 and Edward Curtis ethnographic cyanotypes of native North Americans are preserved in the George Eastman House Pictorialism Edit nbsp Edward Steichen 1904 Midnight Lake George or Road into the Valley Moonrise nbsp Bertha Evelyn Jaques Untitled c 1900 cyanotype NGA 136408Pictorialists throughout Europe and other western countries in efforts to have photography accepted as an art form emphasised handcraft in printing in imitation of painting and drawing and drew on Symbolist subject matter and themes Many of the practitioners were respected amateurs whose work was rewarded in a system of international salons run by such organisations as the Camera Club of New York and competition promoted an elevated level of technical experimentation with all of the then current processes such as calotypy cyanotypy gum printing platinum printing bromoil and Autochrome colour 62 Clarence White s impeccable domestic and plein air pictures are indebted in their bold composition to his contemporaries the painters Thomas Wilmer Dewing William Merritt Chase and John White Alexander His labor intensive process entailed developing the negatives then making tests on cyanotype playing with dimensions proportions and other variables before making a print in platinum which he then meticulously and expressively retouched Alfred Steiglitz in White s portrait of him 1907 held in Princeton University Art Museum appears gloweringly critical in the cyanotype print preserved there 63 At the turn of the century painter photographer Edward Steichen then associated with Alfred Steiglitz who promoted the Photo Secession and Pictorialism through his Camera Work 1903 1917 produced prints of Midnight Lake George now held in The Alfred Stieglitz Collection Photographs at the Art Institute of Chicago where in 2007 scientific examination of the prints and his records concluded that cyanotype had been incorporated in their predominant gum bichromate over platinum production 64 Steichen argued provocatively in the first issue of Camera Work that every photograph is a fake from start to finish a purely impersonal unmanipulated photograph being practically impossible 64 Photo Secessionist Franco American Paul Burty Havilland involved through marriage with the Lalique company evinces a Japonisme in his moody cyanotype portraits and nudes made between 1898 1920 65 Another American Pictorialist Fred Holland Day made cyanotypes of youths nude or in sailor suits in 1911 that are held in the Library of Congress 66 and French artist Charles Francois Jeandel printed his erotic imagery of bound women in his painting workshop in Paris and then in Charente 1890 1900 67 The more traditional American printmaker Bertha Jaques aligned with the antimodernist views of the late Victorian Arts and Crafts movement from 1894 produced more than a thousand cyanotype photographs of wildflowers 68 Impressionism Edit American artist Theodore Robinson painted in Giverny 1887 1892 contemporaneous with Monet of whom he made a portrait in cyanotype and of the haystacks that Monet famously painted He noted that Painting directly from nature is difficult as things do not remain the same the camera helps to retain the picture in your mind 69 He often drew a grid over his cyanotypes or albumen prints to assist transferring the composition with compositional amendments onto canvas though conscious that I must beware of the photo get what I can of it and then go His photographic imagery is held in the Canajoharie Library and Art Gallery and the Terra Foundation for the Arts 69 8 Modernism Edit Arthur Wesley Dow s modernist approach was influential on the Pictorialists in the eloquently simple compositions of his New England environment like Pine Tree 1895 70 a cyanotype related to his interest while studying in France in the flat decorative qualities of Japanese art and that of Les Nabis 71 In Europe Josef Sudek the Poet of Prague sometimes employed the cyanotype to impressionist effect during the early Modernist period Milan born photographer printmaker painter set designer and experimental film maker Luigi Veronesi well informed about the international debate on abstraction was impressed with the abstract potential of the photogram He participated in a 1934 exhibition in Paris with the international group of abstract artists Abstraction Creation through which he met with Fernand Leger He drew inspiration from Leger s Ballet Mecanique Surrealism via the Metaphysical painting of Georgio de Chirico and fellow photographer Giuseppe Cavalli with whom convinced of the essential uselessness of art in 1947 he founded a group named La Bussola The Compass Influenced by Constructivist theories and politically aligned with Communism Veronesi used the cyanotype photogram after 1932 as a means of revealing metaphysical qualities in objects 72 73 Late modern Edit nbsp Catherine Jansen 1981 The Blue Room cyanotype on fabric mixed media In a 2008 essay A D Coleman perceived a return of the legacy Pictorialist methods being applied in art photography from 1976 62 a tendency represented in Francesca Woodman s late cyanotypes and in contact prints by Barbara Kasten and Bea Nettles 74 Weston Naef curator of photography at the J Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles in a 1998 New York Times article by critic Lyle Rexer confirmed that Looking back at photography s pioneers today s artists see a way to restore expression to an art beguiled by technology referring to the loss of intimacy in digital imaging to account for artists attraction to daguerreotypes tintypes cyanotypes stereopticon images albumen prints collodion wet plates all physical and hands on methods 75 Artists David McDermott and Peter McGough who met in the East Village New York art scene of the 1980s and until 1995 took the phenomenon to the extreme of reconstructing themselves as Victorian gentlemen adopting the lifestyle and documenting it and their possessions using vintage cameras and materials first inspired by their discovery of the cyanotype and dating their contemporary works in the nineteenth century 76 Contemporary Edit nbsp Indigo XII Kate Cordsen Cyanotype on handmade paperSince 2000 around 10 books and in growing numbers are published each year in English in which cyanotype appears in the title compared to only 95 in total from 1843 to 1999 77 Though it has been an artform since its inception the numbers of artists now employing the cyanotype process have burgeoned and they are not solely photographers In the book of the 2022 British exhibition Squaring the Circles of Confusion Neo Pictorialism in the 21st Century eight contemporary artists Takashi Arai Celine Bodin Susan Derges David George Joy Gregory Tom Hunter Ian Phillips McLaren and Spencer Rowell employ the craft of photography for postmodern purpose including the cyanotype 78 International Edit Many were included in the first American international survey of the cyanotype in 2016 the Worcester Art Museum s Cyanotypes Photography s Blue Period 46 which displayed uses of the medium that extend well beyond the utilitarian contact printing of negatives Annie Lopez stitched together cyanotypes printed on tamale paper to create dresses Brooke Williams tea toned her cyanotypes adjusting their color to accord with her story as a Jamaican American woman and Hugh Scott Douglas experimented with photograms and abstraction In 2018 the New York Public Library exhibited the work of nineteen contemporary artists who employ the medium Mounted 175 years after Anna Atkin s first book of cyanotypes British Algae the exhibition was titled Anna Atkins Refracted Contemporary Works 79 Amongst others currently working in or with cyanotype are United States Edit Christian Marclay who suggests musical scores in his grids of cassette tapes or their unspooling Kate Cordsen applies Japanese aesthetics and non Cartesian perspective in her mural scale cyanotype landscapes Betty Hahn was early to incorporate cyanotype with other art media including hand painting with embroidery as a feminist statement 80 Meghann Riepenhoff reprises Anna Atkins by exposing her prepared papers underneath the waves so light filters through moving sand shells and water currents 46 81 Canada Edit Canadian Erin Shirreff translates her sculptural interests into large scale cyanotype photograms of temporary three dimensional compositions in her studio with hours long exposures during which component forms are moved added or subtracted for transparent effect 82 Germany Edit German artist Marco Breuer abrades cyanotype prints on watercolour paper in representations of the passing of time Iceland Edit Icelandic artist and filmmaker Inga Lisa Middleton employs the cyanotype for nostalgic representations of her homeland and as a symbolic colour in imagery alerting audiences to an emerging catastrophe in the marine environment United Kingdom Edit British born American resident Walead Beshty s Barbican Art Gallery installation of 12 000 cyanotype prints traces a visual time line from October 2013 to September 2014 in a work called A Partial Disassembling of an Invention Without a Future Helter Skelter and Random Notes in Which the Pulleys and Cogwheels Are Lying Around at Random All Over the Workbench produced from each object from the artists studio being exposed on cyanotype coated found paper card or wood See also EditBlueprint Sepia Monochrome Film tinting Spirit duplicator Mimeograph DuotoneReferences Edit a b c d Ware Mike 2004 Cyanotype the history science and art of photographic printing in Prussian blue London Bradford England Science Museum National Museum of Photography Film amp Television ISBN 978 1 900747 07 3 OCLC 701793636 Ware Mike 1998 John Herschel s Cyanotype Invention or Discovery History of Photography Winter 1998 22 4 371 379 doi 10 1080 03087298 1998 10443901 Herschel John F W 1842 On the action of the rays of the solar spectrum on vegetable colours and on some new photographic processes Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 132 181 214 Bibcode 1842RSPT 132 181H OCLC 973449546 Market House Books ed 1999 Dobereiner Johann Wolfgang In A Dictionary of Scientists Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280086 2 Dobereiner Johann Wolfgang Zur chemischen Kenntnis der imponderabilien in der organischen Natur dissertation in Baier Wolfgang 1965 A source book of photographic history Quellendarstellungen zur Geschichte der Fotografie in German Leipzig Fotokinoverlag OCLC 3132088 a b Eder Josef Maria Epstean Edward 1945 History of Photography doi 10 7312 eder91430 ISBN 978 0 231 88370 2 OCLC 1104874591 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Smee Alfred September 1840 On the Ferrosesquicyanuret of Potassium Philosophical Magazine Series 3 17 109 193 201 a b c d e f Hannavy John ed 2013 12 16 Encyclopedia of Nineteenth Century Photography Routledge doi 10 4324 9780203941782 ISBN 978 0 203 94178 2 Atkins Anna Schaaf Larry John Chuang Joshua 2018 Sun gardens cyanotypes by Anna Atkins exhibition New York public library du 19 octobre 2018 au 17 Novembre 2019 ISBN 978 3 7913 5798 0 OCLC 1062398057 Schaaf Larry April 1982 Anna Atkins Cyanotypes An Experiment in Photographic Publishing History of Photography 6 2 151 72 doi 10 1080 03087298 1982 10442730 Newton Gael Ennis Helen Long Chris 1988 Shades of light photography and Australia 1839 1988 Canberra Australian National Gallery Collins Australia ISBN 978 0 642 08152 0 OCLC 19222178 Dobbie Herbert Haigh Elizabeth 1880 New Zealand ferns 148 varieties OCLC 155885797 Fisher George Thomas 1843 Photogenie manipulation containing plain instructions in the theory and practice of the arts of photography calotype cyanotype ferrotype chrysotype London G Knight and Sons OCLC 491515258 Maimon Vered 2015 Singular images failed copies William Henry Fox Talbot and the early photograph University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 1 4529 5352 6 OCLC 1065707839 Charles Wehrenberg Mississippi Blue Henry P Bosse and his Views on the Mississippi River Twin Palms 2002 ISBN 0 944092 98 5 Moon Abby 2016 The Expressive Potential of Bosse s Landscapes In Cyanotypes Photography s Blue Period Worcester Art Museum Wehrenberg Charles Bosse Henry 2001 Mississippi blue Henry P Bosse and his views on the Mississippi River between Minneapolis and St Louis 1883 1891 San Francisco Calif Solo Zone ISBN 978 1 886163 14 0 OCLC 83749664 McMorris Penny Kile Michael 1986 The art quilt San Francisco Quilt Digest Press ISBN 978 0 913327 08 1 OCLC 13643272 Sider Sandra 2016 Contemporary art quilts in U S museum collections Art Quilt Collector Hebron Ct Studio Art Quilt Associates Inc Duchochois Peter C 2007 Photographic Reproduction Processes OCLC 1305965796 Popular Miscellany Copying designs by photography Popular Science 13 9 251 June 1878 a b General View of Niagara Falls from Bridge World Digital Library Retrieved 11 February 2013 Thornthwaite W H 1851 Guide to Photography London Horne Thornthwaite and Wood OCLC 316441617 a b Ware Mike 2014 Cyanomicon Buxton www mikeware co uk a b c Burns Nancy 2016 Cyanotypes Photography s Blue Period Worcester Worcester Art Museum ISBN 978 0 936042 06 0 a b c d e Anderson Christina Z 2019 Cyanotype The Blueprint in Contemporary Practice New York Focal Press pp 11 18 ISBN 978 0 429 44141 7 a b Hirsch Robert Valentino John 2001 Photographic Possibilities 2nd Edition Focal Press ISBN 978 1 136 09053 0 OCLC 1103262926 Koenig Karl 1999 Gumoil Photographic Printing Revised Edition Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 136 09029 5 OCLC 1016062767 Anderson Christina Z 17 June 2016 Gum printing a step by step manual highlighting artists and their creative practice New York Taylor amp Francis pp 69 73 77 121 149 168 266 ISBN 978 1 138 10150 0 OCLC 1047865042 a b c Berkowitz Steven Hybrid Photography Cyanotype Toners PDF Golaz Annette 2022 Cyanotype toning using botanicals to tone blueprints naturally Routledge ISBN 978 0 367 55356 2 OCLC 1291715929 Cyanotype toning the basics mpaulphotography 2011 04 01 Retrieved 2015 09 14 http www blog alexisrago com residency 2019 cyanotype workshop Alexis Rago Hannavy John 2013 12 16 Encyclopedia of Nineteenth Century Photography Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 87327 1 Ware Mike 1999 Cyanotypes their history chemistry and conservation Care of Photographic Moving Image amp Sound Collections 115 123 OCLC 610989224 Aloi Giovanni 2021 Unearthed Photography s Roots Antennae The Journal of Nature in Visual Culture 53 66 77 Washing instructions for cloth blueprintsonfabric com a b Fineman Mia October 2004 Kodak and the Rise of Amateur Photography The Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History The Metropolitan Museum of Art Brown Ruth 2016 Cyanotypes on fabric a blueprint of how to produce blueprints SC Publications ISBN 978 0 9554647 5 1 OCLC 939708802 Enfield Jill 2020 Jill Enfield s guide to photographic alternative processes popular historical and contemporary techniques Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 22906 8 OCLC 1125310189 Tsakiris Stephanos September 18 2017 Guinness world record Largest cyanotype Thessaloniki Drawing Rooms Carl Palazzolo Denyse Thomasos Robin Hill Abstract Art Online January 2001 a b Saska Hope 2010 Anna Atkins Photographs of British Algae Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts 84 1 4 8 15 doi 10 1086 dia23183243 ISSN 0011 9636 S2CID 165576017 Robert Rauschenberg Among Friends The Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 2020 02 12 DEEPER DARKER BRIGHTER by Pamela Bain and Carolyn Lewens Capture magazine www capturemag com au Retrieved 2022 04 10 a b c Loos Ted 2016 02 05 Cyanotype Photography s Blue Period Is Making a Comeback The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 02 14 Kellner Thomas Turpin Anthony 2012 Lost Memories or Patrice s bathroom dolls interview www thomaskellner com Retrieved 2022 04 13 Atkins Anna 1842 British Algae Cyanotype Impressions Britain ISBN 978 3 95829 510 0 Hornby Louise 2021 Still Modernism photography literature film S l Oxford University Press p 147 ISBN 978 0 19 762604 7 OCLC 1265455908 FlatFile DanaMatthews 2016 04 04 Retrieved 2022 04 10 Victorian Life 43 Cyanotypes Vintage Everyday Retrieved 18 August 2019 Official descriptive and illustrated catalogue of the great exhibition of the works and industry of all nations 1 1 London 1851 p 441 OCLC 312476383 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Crawford William 1979 The keepers of light a history amp working guide to early photographic processes Morgan amp Morgan p 68 OCLC 644240024 Obituary Royal Astronomical Society 8 August 1830 Washington Teasdale History of Science Museum Oxford Retrieved 18 August 2019 Washington Teasdale History of Science Museum Harding Colin Autumn 2001 Swimming in a cork jacket Edward Linley Sambourne and photography The British Art Journal 3 1 43 50 Bayard et Bertall Paris 1865 Collection ethnographique photographiee sous les auspices de la Societe d ethnographie et publiee avec le concours d une commission speciale in French Paris Bureaux de la Societe d ethnographie Imprimerie Lemercier OCLC 981925860 de Labarthe Charles 1862 Annuaire de la Societe d ethnographie 1862 in French Paris Challamel OCLC 30855082 Matthias Agnes Mason Rainer Michael 2007 Matthias Kupferstich Kabinett ed Zeichnungen des Lichts Cliches verre von Corot Daubigny und anderen aus deutschen Sammlungen anlasslich der Ausstellung Zeichnungen des Lichts Cliches verre von Corot Daubigny und Anderen aus Deutschen Sammlungen Kupferstich Kabinett Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden 9 Juni bis 3 September 2007 in German Deutscher Kunstverlag ISBN 978 3 422 06723 3 OCLC 239236369 The Cyanotypes National Museum of American History 2014 11 17 Retrieved 2022 04 10 a b Coleman A D November 2008 Return of the Suppressed Pictorialism s Revenge Border Crossings 27 4 72 80 via EBSCO Dalati S 2018 Reconsidering sepia Clarence White s photography at the Davis Magazine Antiques 185 2 58 59 a b O Connor Kaslyne Pate Ariel Penichon Sylvie Casadio Francesca 2020 04 02 Moonlight or Midnight Researching the Phases of Edward Steichen s Moonrise Prints Journal of the American Institute for Conservation 59 2 111 122 doi 10 1080 01971360 2020 1711689 ISSN 0197 1360 S2CID 219085989 La Lanterne japonaise Paul Haviland www musee orsay fr Retrieved 2022 04 13 Holland Day Fred Search results from Available Online Day F Holland Fred Holland Cyanotypes Library of Congress Retrieved 2022 04 12 Charles Francois Jeandel Collection des oeuvres www musee orsay fr Retrieved 2022 04 13 Bertha E Jaques Smithsonian American Art Museum Retrieved 25 March 2018 a b Scharf Aaron 1968 Art and Photography London Allen Lane The Penguin PR OCLC 1075334751 Green Nancy E 1990 Arthur Wesley Dow and his influence Ithaca N Y Herbert F Johnson Museum of Art OCLC 22530254 Glueck Grace 2002 11 15 The Photographs of Arthur Wesley Dow The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 04 11 Sperone Gian Enzo Pelizzari Maria Antonella 2016 Painting in Italy 1910s 1950s futurism abstraction concrete art Robilant Voena p 148 Miracco Renato 2006 Italian abstraction 1910 1960 Mazzotta ISBN 978 88 202 1811 9 Riches Harriet September 2012 Projecting Touch Francesca Woodman s Late Blueprints Photographies 5 2 135 157 doi 10 1080 17540763 2012 701598 ISSN 1754 0763 S2CID 192002722 Harris Jane February 2001 aura fixation old technology for new photography Art on Paper 5 3 64 68 McDermott amp McGough Juncosa Enrique McDermott David McGough Peter Irish Museum of Modern Art Kilmainham Dublin Ireland 2008 McDermott amp McGough an experience of amusing chemistry photographs 1990 1890 Dublin Milano New York City Irish Museum of Modern Art in association with Charta ISBN 978 88 8158 672 1 OCLC 216938953 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Results for cyanotype gt Book WorldCat org www worldcat org Retrieved 2022 04 11 Pritchard Michael 2020 Squaring the circles of confusion Neo pictorialism in the 21st century Bath Royal Photographic Society ISBN 978 0 904495 21 8 OCLC 1295402994 Anna Atkins Refracted Contemporary Works The New York Public Library Retrieved 2022 04 25 Markowitz Sally J 1994 01 01 The Distinction between Art and Craft Journal of Aesthetic Education 28 1 55 70 doi 10 2307 3333159 JSTOR 3333159 Merola Alex Meghann Riepenhoff s new book collects cyanotypes made by ice 1854 Photography British Journal of Photography Retrieved 2023 03 14 Erin Shireff Arm s Length Sikkema Jenkins amp Co Retrieved 2022 04 11 Further reading EditAtkins Anna 1985 Sun Gardens Victorian Photograms With text by Larry J Schaaf New York Aperture ISBN 0 89381 203 X Blacklow Laura 2000 New Dimensions in Photo Processes a step by step manual 3rd ed Boston Focal Press ISBN 0 240 80431 7 Ware M 1999 Cyanotype the history science and art of photographic printing in Prussian blue Science Museum UK ISBN 1 900747 07 3 Crawford William 1979 The Keepers of Light New York Morgan and Morgan ISBN 0 87100 158 6 Loos Ted February 5 2016 Cyanotype Photography s Blue Period is Making a Comeback New York Times Worcester MA Tsakiris Stephanos September 18 2017 Guinness world record Largest cyanotype Thessaloniki Herschel John 1842 On the Action of the Rays of the Solar Spectrum on Vegetable Colours and on Some New Photographic Processes London Royal Society of London JSTOR 108152 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cyanotypes Mike Ware s New Cyanotype A new version of the cyanotype that address some of the classical cyanotype s shortcomings as a photographic process Gallery of over 100 artists working in cyanotypes on AlternativePhotography com Brown G E 1900 Ferric and heliographic processes London Photographic reproduction processes A practical treatise of the photo impressions without silver salts New York The Scovill amp Adams company 1891 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cyanotype amp oldid 1179171271, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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