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Wikipedia

Photogram

A photogram is a photographic image made without a camera by placing objects directly onto the surface of a light-sensitive material such as photographic paper and then exposing it to light.

A photogram of a number of photography-related objects
Photogram with soil and plants.

The usual result is a negative shadow image that shows variations in tone that depends upon the transparency of the objects used. Areas of the paper that have received no light appear white; those exposed for a shorter time or through transparent or semi-transparent objects appear grey,[1] while fully-exposed areas are black in the final print.

The technique is sometimes called cameraless photography.[2][3][4] It was used by Man Ray in his rayographs. Other artists who have experimented with the technique include László Moholy-Nagy, Christian Schad (who called them "Schadographs"), Imogen Cunningham and Pablo Picasso.[5]

Variations of the technique have also been used for scientific purposes, in shadowgraph studies of flow in transparent media and in high-speed Schlieren photography, and in the medical X-ray.

The term photogram comes from the combining form phōtō- (φωτω-) of Ancient Greek phôs (φῶς, "light"), and Ancient Greek suffix -gramma (-γραμμα), from grámma (γράμμα, "written character, letter, that which is drawn"), from gráphō (γράφω, "to scratch, to scrape, to graze").

History edit

 
One of Anna Atkins's cyanotype photograms of Festuca grasses

Prehistory edit

The phenomenon of the shadow has long aroused human curiosity and inspired artistic representation, as recorded by Pliny the Elder,[6] and various forms of shadow play since the 1st millennium BCE.[7][8] The photogram, in essence, is a means by which the fall of light and shade on a surface may be automatically captured and preserved.[9][3] To do so required a substance that would react to light. From the 17th century, photochemical reactions were progressively observed or discovered in salts of silver, iron, uranium and chromium. In 1725, Johann Heinrich Schulze was the first to demonstrate a temporary photographic effect in silver salts, confirmed by Carl Wilhhelm Scheele in 1777,[10] who found that violet light caused the greatest reaction in silver chloride. Humphry Davy and Thomas Wedgewood reported[11] that they had produced temporary images from placing stencils/light sources on photo-sensitized materials, but had no means of fixing (making permanent) the images.[12]

Nineteenth century edit

The first photographic negatives made were photograms (though the first permanent photograph was made with a camera by Nicéphore Niépce). William Henry Fox Talbot called these photogenic drawings, which he made by placing leaves or pieces of lace onto sensitized paper, then left them outdoors on a sunny day to expose. This produced a dark background with a white silhouette of the placed object.[13]

In 1843, Anna Atkins produced a book titled British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions in installments; the first to be illustrated with photographs. The images were all photograms of botanical specimens, mostly seaweeds, which she made using Sir John Herschel's cyanotype process, which yields blue images.[14]

Modernism edit

Photograms and artists who worked with(in)the medium have participated in/contributed to several studied/demarcated modern art movements, such as Dada[15][16][17] and Constructivism,[18][19] and in architecture in the formalist dissections of the Bauhaus.[20][21]

The relative ease of access (not needing a camera and, depending on the medium, a darkroom) and perhaps the interactive to the point of feeling incidental[22] nature of creating photograms[23] enabled experiments in abstraction by Christian Schad as early as 1918,[24] Man Ray in 1921, and Moholy-Nagy in 1922,[25] through dematerialisation and distortion, merging and interpenetration of forms, and flattening of perspective.

Christian Schad's 'schadographs' edit

In 1918 Christian Schad's experiments with the photogram were inspired by Dada, creating photograms from random arrangements of discarded objects he had collected such as torn tickets, receipts and rags. Some argue that he was the first to make this an art form, preceding Man Ray and László Moholy-Nagy by at least a year or two,[26] and one was published in March 1920 in the magazine Dadaphone[27] by Tristan Tzara, who dubbed them 'Schadographs'.[28]

Man Ray's 'rayographs' edit

 
Man Ray, 1922, Untitled Rayograph, gelatin silver photogram, 23.5 x 17.8 cm

Photograms were used in the 20th century by a number of photographers, particularly Man Ray, whose "rayographs" were also given the name by Dada leader Tzara.[28] Ray described his (re-)discovery of the process in his 1963 autobiography;[29]

"Again at night I developed the last plates I had exposed; the following night I set to work printing them. Besides the trays and chemical solutions in bottles, a glass graduate and thermometer, a box of photographic paper, my laboratory equipment was nil. Fortunately, I had to make only contact prints from the plates. I simply laid a glass negative on a sheet of light-sensitive paper on the table, by the light of my little red lantern, turned on the bulb that hung from the ceiling, for a few seconds, and developed the prints. It was while making these prints that I hit on my Rayograph process, or cameraless photographs. One sheet of photo paper got into the developing tray - a sheet unexposed that had been mixed with those already exposed under the negatives - I made my several exposures first, developing them together later - and as I waited in vain a couple of minutes for an image to appear, regretting the waste paper, I mechanically placed a small glass funnel, the graduate and the thermometer in the tray on the wetted paper, I turned on the light: before my eyes an image began to form, not quite a simple silhouette of the objects as in a straight photograph, but distorted and refracted by the glass more or less in contact with the paper and standing out against a black background, the part directly exposed to the light. I remembered when I was a boy placing fern leaves in a printing frame with proof paper, exposing it to sunlight, and obtaining a white negative of the leaves. This was the same idea, but with an added three-dimensional quality and tonal gradation."

In his photograms, Man Ray made combinations of objects—a comb, a spiral of cut paper, an architect's French curve—some recognisable, others transformed, typifying Dada's rejection of 'style', emphasising chance and abstraction.[16] He published a selection of these rayographs as Champs délicieux in December 1922, with an introduction by Tzara. His 1923 film Le Retour à la Raison ('Return to Reason') adapts rayograph technique to moving images.[30]

Other 20th century artists edit

In the 1930s, artists including Theodore Roszak, and Piet Zwart also made photograms. Luigi Veronesi combined the photographic image with oil on canvas in large-scale colour images by preparing a light-sensitive canvas on which he placed objects in the dark for exposure and then fixing.[31] The shapes became the matrix for an abstract painting to which he applied colour and added drawn geometric lines to enhance the dynamics, exhibiting them at the Galerie L’Equipe in Paris in 1938-1939.[32][33] Bronislaw Schlabs, Julien Coulommier, Andrzej Pawlowski and Beksinki were photogram artists in the 1940s and 1950s; Heinz Hajek-Halke and Kurt Wendlandt with their light graphics in the 1960s; Lina Kolarova, Rene Mächler, Dennis Oppenheim, and Andreas Mulas in the 1970s; and Tomy Ceballos, Kare Magnole, Andreas Müller-Pohle, and Floris M. Neusüss in the 1980s.[28]

Contemporary edit

Established contemporary artists who are widely known for using photograms are Adam Fuss,[34] Susan Derges, Christian Marclay, and Karen Amy Finkel Fishof, [35][36][37][38][39] who has digitized and minted her photograms as NFTs. Younger artists worldwide[40] continue to value the materiality of the technique in the digital age.[41] Mauritian artist Audrey Albert uses cameraless techniques to connect material culture to contemporary identities of Chagos Islanders.[42][43][44]

Procedure edit

The customary approach to making a photogram is to use a darkroom and enlarger and to proceed as one would in making a conventional print, but instead of using a negative, to arrange objects on top of a piece of photographic paper for exposure under the enlarger lamp which can be controlled with the timer switch and aperture controls. That will give a result similar to the image at left;[45] since the enlarger emits light through a lens aperture, the shadows of even tall objects like the beaker standing upright on the paper will stay sharp; the more so at smaller apertures.

The print is then processed, washed, and dried.[46]

 
Generation of a photogram: A broad-source light (1) illuminates objects (2 and 3) that are placed directly in front of a sheet of photosensitive paper. Depending on the object's distance to the paper and properties of light emitted by the light source, the object's shadows look harder (7) or softer (5). Areas of the paper that are in total shadow (6) stay white; they become grey (8) if the objects are transparent or translucent (9); areas that are fully exposed to the light (4) are blackened. Point source light (e.g. enlarger lens at a small f-stop) will cast hard shadows.

At this stage the image will look similar to a negative, in which shadows are white. A contact-print onto a fresh sheet of photographic paper will reverse the tones if a more naturalistic result is desired, which may be facilitated by making the initial print on film.[47]

However, there are other arrangements for making photograms, and devising them is part of the creative process. Alice Lex-Nerlinger used the conventional darkroom approach in making photograms as a variation on her airbrushed stencil paintings,[48] since lighting penetrating the translucent paper from which she cut her pictures would print a variegated texture she could not otherwise obtain.

Another component of this medium is the light source, or sources, used.[49] A broad source of light will cast nuances of shadow; umbra, penumbra and antumbra, as shown in the accompanying diagram.

Photograms may be made outdoors providing the photographic emulsion is sufficiently slow to permit it. Direct sunlight is a point-source of light (like that of an enlarger), while cloudy conditions give soft-edged shadows around three-dimensional objects placed on the photosensitive surface. The cyanotype process ('blueprints') such as that used by Anna Atkins (see above), is slow and insensitive enough that fixing an impression on paper, fabric, timber or other supports can be done in subdued light indoors. Exposure outdoors may take many minutes depending on conditions, and its progress may be gauged by inspection as the coating darkens. 'Printing-out paper' or other daylight-printing material such as gum bichromate may also enable outdoor exposure. Christian Schad simply placed tram tickets and other ephemera under glass on printing-out paper on his window-sill for exposure.[26]

Conventional monochrome or colour, or direct-positive photographic material may be exposed in the dark using a flash unit, as does Adam Fuss for his photograms that capture the movement of a crawling baby, or an eel in shallow water. Susan Derges captures water currents in the same way, while Harry Nankin[50] has immersed large sheets of monochrome photographic paper at the edge of the sea and mounted a flash on a specially-constructed oversize tripod above it to capture the action of waves and seaweeds washing over the paper surface. In 1986, Floris Neusüss began his Nachtbilder ('nocturnal pictures'), exposed by lightning.[51]

Other variations include using the light of a television screen or computer display, pressing the photosensitive paper to the surface. Multiple light sources or exposing with multiple flashes of light, or moving the light source during exposure, projecting shadows from a low-angle light, and using successive exposures while moving, removing or adding shadows, will produce multiple shadows of varying quality.[49]

List of notable photographers using photograms edit

See also edit

  • Luminogram – photogram using light only with no objects
  • Schlieren photography – light is focused with a lens or mirror and a knife edge is placed at the focal point to create graduated shadows of flow and waves in otherwise transparent media like air, water, or glass
  • Shadowgraph – like Schlieren photography, but without the knife-edge, reveals non-uniformities in transparent media
  • Chemigram – camera-less technique using photographic (and other) chemistry with light
  • Neues Sehen – László Moholy-Nagy's 'New Vision' photography movement
  • Cliché verre – semiphotographic printmaking technique using a negative created by drawing
  • Drawn-on-film animation – cliche-verre technique in which movie film emulsion is scratched and drawn frame-by-frame
  • Cyanotype – photographic printing process that produces a cyan-blue print
  • Kirlian photography – photographic techniques used to capture the phenomenon of electrical coronal discharges

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photogram, this, article, about, photographic, technique, magazine, magazine, photogram, photographic, image, made, without, camera, placing, objects, directly, onto, surface, light, sensitive, material, such, photographic, paper, then, exposing, light, photog. This article is about the photographic technique For the magazine see The Photogram magazine A photogram is a photographic image made without a camera by placing objects directly onto the surface of a light sensitive material such as photographic paper and then exposing it to light A photogram of a number of photography related objectsPhotogram with soil and plants The usual result is a negative shadow image that shows variations in tone that depends upon the transparency of the objects used Areas of the paper that have received no light appear white those exposed for a shorter time or through transparent or semi transparent objects appear grey 1 while fully exposed areas are black in the final print The technique is sometimes called cameraless photography 2 3 4 It was used by Man Ray in his rayographs Other artists who have experimented with the technique include Laszlo Moholy Nagy Christian Schad who called them Schadographs Imogen Cunningham and Pablo Picasso 5 Variations of the technique have also been used for scientific purposes in shadowgraph studies of flow in transparent media and in high speed Schlieren photography and in the medical X ray The term photogram comes from the combining form phōtō fwtw of Ancient Greek phos fῶs light and Ancient Greek suffix gramma gramma from gramma gramma written character letter that which is drawn from graphō grafw to scratch to scrape to graze Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 Nineteenth century 1 3 Modernism 1 4 Christian Schad s schadographs 1 5 Man Ray s rayographs 1 6 Other 20th century artists 1 7 Contemporary 2 Procedure 3 List of notable photographers using photograms 4 See also 5 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp One of Anna Atkins s cyanotype photograms of Festuca grassesPrehistory edit The phenomenon of the shadow has long aroused human curiosity and inspired artistic representation as recorded by Pliny the Elder 6 and various forms of shadow play since the 1st millennium BCE 7 8 The photogram in essence is a means by which the fall of light and shade on a surface may be automatically captured and preserved 9 3 To do so required a substance that would react to light From the 17th century photochemical reactions were progressively observed or discovered in salts of silver iron uranium and chromium In 1725 Johann Heinrich Schulze was the first to demonstrate a temporary photographic effect in silver salts confirmed by Carl Wilhhelm Scheele in 1777 10 who found that violet light caused the greatest reaction in silver chloride Humphry Davy and Thomas Wedgewood reported 11 that they had produced temporary images from placing stencils light sources on photo sensitized materials but had no means of fixing making permanent the images 12 Nineteenth century edit This section needs expansion with The 19th century was when photographic processes with cameras became more widely accessible standardized items began to be produced to create photographs and presumably photograms You can help by adding to it February 2023 The first photographic negatives made were photograms though the first permanent photograph was made with a camera by Nicephore Niepce William Henry Fox Talbot called these photogenic drawings which he made by placing leaves or pieces of lace onto sensitized paper then left them outdoors on a sunny day to expose This produced a dark background with a white silhouette of the placed object 13 In 1843 Anna Atkins produced a book titled British Algae Cyanotype Impressions in installments the first to be illustrated with photographs The images were all photograms of botanical specimens mostly seaweeds which she made using Sir John Herschel s cyanotype process which yields blue images 14 Modernism edit Photograms and artists who worked with in the medium have participated in contributed to several studied demarcated modern art movements such as Dada 15 16 17 and Constructivism 18 19 and in architecture in the formalist dissections of the Bauhaus 20 21 The relative ease of access not needing a camera and depending on the medium a darkroom and perhaps the interactive to the point of feeling incidental 22 nature of creating photograms 23 enabled experiments in abstraction by Christian Schad as early as 1918 24 Man Ray in 1921 and Moholy Nagy in 1922 25 through dematerialisation and distortion merging and interpenetration of forms and flattening of perspective Christian Schad s schadographs edit In 1918 Christian Schad s experiments with the photogram were inspired by Dada creating photograms from random arrangements of discarded objects he had collected such as torn tickets receipts and rags Some argue that he was the first to make this an art form preceding Man Ray and Laszlo Moholy Nagy by at least a year or two 26 and one was published in March 1920 in the magazine Dadaphone 27 by Tristan Tzara who dubbed them Schadographs 28 Man Ray s rayographs edit nbsp Man Ray 1922 Untitled Rayograph gelatin silver photogram 23 5 x 17 8 cmPhotograms were used in the 20th century by a number of photographers particularly Man Ray whose rayographs were also given the name by Dada leader Tzara 28 Ray described his re discovery of the process in his 1963 autobiography 29 Again at night I developed the last plates I had exposed the following night I set to work printing them Besides the trays and chemical solutions in bottles a glass graduate and thermometer a box of photographic paper my laboratory equipment was nil Fortunately I had to make only contact prints from the plates I simply laid a glass negative on a sheet of light sensitive paper on the table by the light of my little red lantern turned on the bulb that hung from the ceiling for a few seconds and developed the prints It was while making these prints that I hit on my Rayograph process or cameraless photographs One sheet of photo paper got into the developing tray a sheet unexposed that had been mixed with those already exposed under the negatives I made my several exposures first developing them together later and as I waited in vain a couple of minutes for an image to appear regretting the waste paper I mechanically placed a small glass funnel the graduate and the thermometer in the tray on the wetted paper I turned on the light before my eyes an image began to form not quite a simple silhouette of the objects as in a straight photograph but distorted and refracted by the glass more or less in contact with the paper and standing out against a black background the part directly exposed to the light I remembered when I was a boy placing fern leaves in a printing frame with proof paper exposing it to sunlight and obtaining a white negative of the leaves This was the same idea but with an added three dimensional quality and tonal gradation In his photograms Man Ray made combinations of objects a comb a spiral of cut paper an architect s French curve some recognisable others transformed typifying Dada s rejection of style emphasising chance and abstraction 16 He published a selection of these rayographs as Champs delicieux in December 1922 with an introduction by Tzara His 1923 film Le Retour a la Raison Return to Reason adapts rayograph technique to moving images 30 Other 20th century artists edit In the 1930s artists including Theodore Roszak and Piet Zwart also made photograms Luigi Veronesi combined the photographic image with oil on canvas in large scale colour images by preparing a light sensitive canvas on which he placed objects in the dark for exposure and then fixing 31 The shapes became the matrix for an abstract painting to which he applied colour and added drawn geometric lines to enhance the dynamics exhibiting them at the Galerie L Equipe in Paris in 1938 1939 32 33 Bronislaw Schlabs Julien Coulommier Andrzej Pawlowski and Beksinki were photogram artists in the 1940s and 1950s Heinz Hajek Halke and Kurt Wendlandt with their light graphics in the 1960s Lina Kolarova Rene Machler Dennis Oppenheim and Andreas Mulas in the 1970s and Tomy Ceballos Kare Magnole Andreas Muller Pohle and Floris M Neususs in the 1980s 28 Contemporary edit Established contemporary artists who are widely known for using photograms are Adam Fuss 34 Susan Derges Christian Marclay and Karen Amy Finkel Fishof 35 36 37 38 39 who has digitized and minted her photograms as NFTs Younger artists worldwide 40 continue to value the materiality of the technique in the digital age 41 Mauritian artist Audrey Albert uses cameraless techniques to connect material culture to contemporary identities of Chagos Islanders 42 43 44 Procedure editThe customary approach to making a photogram is to use a darkroom and enlarger and to proceed as one would in making a conventional print but instead of using a negative to arrange objects on top of a piece of photographic paper for exposure under the enlarger lamp which can be controlled with the timer switch and aperture controls That will give a result similar to the image at left 45 since the enlarger emits light through a lens aperture the shadows of even tall objects like the beaker standing upright on the paper will stay sharp the more so at smaller apertures The print is then processed washed and dried 46 nbsp Generation of a photogram A broad source light 1 illuminates objects 2 and 3 that are placed directly in front of a sheet of photosensitive paper Depending on the object s distance to the paper and properties of light emitted by the light source the object s shadows look harder 7 or softer 5 Areas of the paper that are in total shadow 6 stay white they become grey 8 if the objects are transparent or translucent 9 areas that are fully exposed to the light 4 are blackened Point source light e g enlarger lens at a small f stop will cast hard shadows At this stage the image will look similar to a negative in which shadows are white A contact print onto a fresh sheet of photographic paper will reverse the tones if a more naturalistic result is desired which may be facilitated by making the initial print on film 47 However there are other arrangements for making photograms and devising them is part of the creative process Alice Lex Nerlinger used the conventional darkroom approach in making photograms as a variation on her airbrushed stencil paintings 48 since lighting penetrating the translucent paper from which she cut her pictures would print a variegated texture she could not otherwise obtain Another component of this medium is the light source or sources used 49 A broad source of light will cast nuances of shadow umbra penumbra and antumbra as shown in the accompanying diagram Photograms may be made outdoors providing the photographic emulsion is sufficiently slow to permit it Direct sunlight is a point source of light like that of an enlarger while cloudy conditions give soft edged shadows around three dimensional objects placed on the photosensitive surface The cyanotype process blueprints such as that used by Anna Atkins see above is slow and insensitive enough that fixing an impression on paper fabric timber or other supports can be done in subdued light indoors Exposure outdoors may take many minutes depending on conditions and its progress may be gauged by inspection as the coating darkens Printing out paper or other daylight printing material such as gum bichromate may also enable outdoor exposure Christian Schad simply placed tram tickets and other ephemera under glass on printing out paper on his window sill for exposure 26 Conventional monochrome or colour or direct positive photographic material may be exposed in the dark using a flash unit as does Adam Fuss for his photograms that capture the movement of a crawling baby or an eel in shallow water Susan Derges captures water currents in the same way while Harry Nankin 50 has immersed large sheets of monochrome photographic paper at the edge of the sea and mounted a flash on a specially constructed oversize tripod above it to capture the action of waves and seaweeds washing over the paper surface In 1986 Floris Neususs began his Nachtbilder nocturnal pictures exposed by lightning 51 Other variations include using the light of a television screen or computer display pressing the photosensitive paper to the surface Multiple light sources or exposing with multiple flashes of light or moving the light source during exposure projecting shadows from a low angle light and using successive exposures while moving removing or adding shadows will produce multiple shadows of varying quality 49 List of notable photographers using photograms editMarkus Amm 52 Anna Atkins 53 Walead Beshty 54 55 Christopher Bucklow 56 Kate Cordsen 57 58 Olive Cotton 59 Susan Derges 60 Michael Flomen 61 62 Adam Fuss 63 Heinz Hajek Halke 64 65 Raoul Hausmann 66 67 John Herschel 68 69 Edmund Kesting 70 Len Lye 71 72 Laszlo Moholy Nagy 73 Alice Lex Nerlinger 48 Floris Michael Neususs Anne Noble 2 74 Andrzej Pawlowski 75 76 Pablo Picasso 77 Man Ray Alexander Rodchenko 78 79 Theodore Roszak 80 81 82 Christian Schad 83 84 85 86 Greg Stimac 87 August Strindberg 88 89 90 91 92 Jean Pierre Sudre 93 Kunie Sugiura 94 Henry Fox Talbot 95 96 97 98 Mikhail Tarkhanov 99 Elsa Thiemann 100 Luigi Veronesi 101 102 103 104 Kurt Wendlandt Nancy Wilson Pajic 105 Keith Carter 106 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Photogram Luminogram photogram using light only with no objects Schlieren photography light is focused with a lens or mirror and a knife edge is placed at the focal point to create graduated shadows of flow and waves in otherwise transparent media like air water or glass Shadowgraph like Schlieren photography but without the knife edge reveals non uniformities in transparent media Chemigram camera less technique using photographic and other chemistry with light Neues Sehen Laszlo Moholy Nagy s New Vision photography movement Cliche verre semiphotographic printmaking technique using a negative created by drawing Drawn on film animation cliche verre technique in which movie film emulsion is scratched and drawn frame by frame Cyanotype photographic printing process that produces a cyan blue print Kirlian photography photographic techniques used to capture the phenomenon of electrical coronal dischargesReferences edit Langford Michael 1999 Basic Photography 7th ed Oxford Focal Press ISBN 0 240 51592 7 a b Batchen Geoffrey 2016 Batchen Geoffrey ed Emanations the art of the cameraless photograph DelMonico Books ISBN 978 3 7913 6646 3 a b Barnes Martin Neususs Floris Michael Cordier Pierre Derges Susan Fabian Miller Garry Fuss Adam 2012 Shadow catchers camera less photography Rev and expanded ed London New York Merrell Victoria and Albert Museum ISBN 978 1 85894 592 7 Barnes Martin 2018 Cameraless photography Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 48036 6 According to Alexandra Matzner in Christian Schad 1895 1982 Retrospectief issued by the Gemeentemuseum Den Haag 2009 ISBN 978 3 87909 974 0 p 216 Schad was the first artist to use the photogram technique developed by William Henry Fox Talbot The photogram was applied by Man Ray Moholy Nagy and Chargesheimer after its introduction by Christian Schad according to the author However this is not substantiated through further reference by Matzner The Dutch catalogue was also issued in German by the Leopold Museum in Vienna 2008 Pliny the Elder Natural History xxxv 14 Fan Pen Chen 2003 Shadow Theaters of the World Asian Folklore Studies Vol 62 No 1 2003 pp 25 64 Orr Inge C 1974 Puppet Theatre in Asia Asian Folklore Studies Nanzan University 33 1 69 84 doi 10 2307 1177504 JSTOR 1177504 Stoichiță Victor Ieronim August 1997 A short history of the shadow Reaktion Books published 1997 ISBN 978 1 86189 000 9 Eder Josef Maria 1972 History of photography 3rd ed New York Dover pp 57 83 ISBN 0 486 23586 6 OCLC 4005270 Sir Humphry Davy 1802 An Account of a Method of Copying Paintings Upon Glass and of Making Profiles by the Agency of Light upon Nitrate of Silver invented by T Wedgwood Esq In Journal of the Royal Institution Hannavy John 2005 Encyclopedia of Nineteenth Century Photography Taylor amp Francis Ltd ISBN 978 0 203 94178 2 Talbot William Henry Fox 1844 The Pencil of Nature London Special Collections Department Library University of Glasgow Archived from the original on 11 June 2011 Retrieved 21 November 2010 Schaaf Larry J Atkins Anna 2018 Chuang Joshua ed Sun gardens cyanotypes by Anna Atkins The New York Public Library ISBN 978 3 7913 5798 0 Dickerman Leah Affron Matthew 2012 Inventing Abstraction 1910 1925 how a radical idea changed modern art Museum of Modern Art ISBN 978 0 87070 828 2 a b Museum of Modern Art New York N Y Umland Anne Sudhalter Adrian Gerson Scott 2008 Dada in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art Museum of Modern Art ISBN 978 0 87070 668 4 Elder Bruce R Bruce May 2013 Dada surrealism amp the cinematic effect Lancaster Wilfrid Laurier University Press published 2012 ISBN 978 1 55458 625 7 Toth Edit 2018 Design and Visual Culture from the Bauhaus to Contemporary Art Optical Deconstructions 1st ed Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 06245 9 Hirsch Robert 2017 Seizing the light a social amp aesthetic history of photography Third ed Routledge Taylor amp Francis Group ISBN 978 1 138 94425 1 Bergdoll Barry Dickerman Leah 2009 Bauhaus 1919 1933 workshops for modernity London Museum of Modern Art ISBN 978 0 87070 758 2 Bauhaus 1985 Bauhaus photography Cambridge Mass MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 13202 2 and therefore automatized or mechanical see Dada imagine you could be a photographer or hobbyist who leaves something accidentally on film photosensitive paper in a bright room Neususs Floris Michael Barrow Thomas F Hagen Charles 1994 Experimental vision the evolution of the photogram since 1919 Roberts Rinehart Publishers in association with the Denver Art Museum ISBN 978 1 879373 73 0 Moholy Nagy Laszlo Penichon Sylvie 2016 Witkovsky Matthew S Eliel Carol S Vail Karole P B eds Moholy Nagy future present First ed Art Institute of Chicago ISBN 978 0 86559 281 0 a b Rosenblum Naomi 1984 A world history of photography 1st ed Abbeville Press ISBN 978 0 89659 438 8 Hage E 2011 The Magazine as Strategy Tristan Tzara s Dada and the Seminal Role of Dada Art Journals in the Dada Movement The Journal of Modern Periodical Studies 2 1 33 53 Penn State University Press a b c Warren Lynne Warren Lynn 15 November 2005 Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century Photography 3 Volume Set Taylor and Francis published 2005 ISBN 978 0 203 94338 0 Man Ray 1963 Self Portrait 1st ed Boston Little Brown Man Ray Emmanuel Radnitzky MoMA The Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 2019 07 05 XLII esposizione internazionale d arte la biennale di Venezia arte e scienza La Biennale di Venezia 1986 ISBN 978 88 208 0331 5 Sperone Gian Enzo Pelizzari Maria Antonella Robilant Voena 2016 Painting in Italy 1910s 1950s futurism abstraction concrete art Robilant Voena p 148 Miracco Renato Estorick Collection Italian Cultural Institute London England 2006 Italian abstraction 1910 1960 Mazzotta ISBN 978 88 202 1811 9 Fuss Adam Tannenbaum Barbara Akron Art Museum National Gallery of Victoria 1992 Adam Fuss photograms Akron Art Museum Edward Goldman s Own Made In LA Pandemic Version Forbes Forbes karen Amy Finkel Fishof Photogrammeuse OpenEye Magazine Radiate Recent Artworks by Karen Amy Finkel Fishof Artillery Magazine Solo Exhibition Karen Amy Finkel Fishof Radiate Artweek Magazine Karen Amy Finkel Fishof Carpazine Magazine National Gallery of Victoria Crombie Isobel Waite Dianne 2003 Firstimpressions contemporary Australian photograms Council of Trustees of the National Gallery of Victoria Abstract 100 Years of Abstract Photography 1917 2017 Suomen valokuvataiteen museo 2017 04 27 Retrieved 2019 07 03 Audrey Albert Manchester School of Art Degree Show 2018 Manchester School of Art Retrieved 2022 05 03 House Manchester International Festival Blackfriars MIF21 Creative Fellowships Manchester International Festival Retrieved 2022 05 03 Audrey Albert Future Fire 2020 Contact 2020 04 09 Retrieved 2022 05 03 Broken omitted visual reference in the text Bargh Peter Making a photogram traditional darkroom ideas ePhotozine com Magazine Publishing Ltd Archived from the original on 30 December 2011 Retrieved 2 January 2012 Holter Patra 1972 Photography without a camera Studio Vista New York Van Nostrand Reinhold ISBN 978 0 289 70331 1 a b Lange B 2004 Printed matter Fotografie im und Buch Leipzig Leipziger Univ Verl a b Lloyd Godman index photograms www lloydgodman net Retrieved 2019 07 04 Monash Gallery of Art 2004 The wave Harry Nankin Wheelers Hill Victoria Floris Neususs German 1937 2020 Getty Museum The J Paul Getty in Los Angeles Retrieved 2020 10 28 Markus Amm Artist s Profile The Saatchi Gallery www saatchigallery com Retrieved 2019 07 04 Brigit Katz How the first female photographer changed the way the world sees algae Smithsonian 30 May 2017 Retrieved 4 July 2019 Appleyard Charlotte Salzmann James 2012 Corporate art collections a handbook to corporate buying Lund Humphries Sotheby s Institute of Art ISBN 978 1 84822 071 3 Furness Rosalind 2007 Frieze Art Fair yearbook 2007 8 New York Frieze p 1928 ISBN 978 0 9553201 2 5 Fraenkel Jeffrey Fraenkel Gallery 1996 Under the sun Fraenkel Gallery ISBN 978 1 881997 01 6 Welling James 2016 In Place Contemporary Photographers Envision a Museum ISBN 978 3 791 35366 1 Allen Jamie M McNear Sarah 2018 The photographer in the garden First ed Rochester New York Aperture ISBN 978 1 59711 373 1 Lakin Shaune A Cotton Olive Dupain Max 2016 Max and Olive the photographic life of Olive Cotton and Max Dupain Canberra A C T National Gallery of Australia ISBN 978 0 642 33462 6 Derges Susan Kemp Martin Pereira Sharmini 1999 Susan Derges liquid form 1985 99 Michael Hue Williams ISBN 978 1 900829 07 6 Langford Martha 2005 Image amp imagination Mois de la photo a Montreal Chesham McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 2969 4 Shindelman Marni Massoni Anne Leighton eds 2018 The Focal Press companion to the constructed image in contemporary photography 1st ed Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 29911 0 Marien Mary Warner 2006 Photography a cultural history 2nd ed Pearson Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 221906 8 Hajek Halke Heinz Sayag Alain Ruetz Michael 2002 Heinz Hajek Halke 1898 1983 1st ed Steidl ISBN 978 3 88243 857 4 Hajek Halke 1965 Abstract pictures on film the technique of making lightgraphics Dennis Dobson Neususs Floris Michael Barrow Thomas F Hagen Charles 1994 Experimental vision the evolution of the photogram since 1919 Roberts Rinehart Publishers Denver Art Museum ISBN 978 1 879373 73 0 Brill Dorothee 2010 Shock and the senseless in Dada and Fluxus 1st ed Dartmouth College Press University Press of New England ISBN 978 1 58465 902 0 Burns Nancy Kathryn Wilson Kristina eds 2016 Cyanotypes photography s blue period Worcester MA Worcester Art Museum ISBN 978 0 936042 06 0 James Christopher 2016 The book of alternative photographic processes Third ed Boston Cengage Learning p 234 ISBN 978 1 285 08931 7 Edmund Kesting Photogram Lightbulb 1927 The Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 2019 07 04 Horrocks Roger Lye Len 2001 Len Lye a biography Auckland University Press ISBN 978 1 86940 247 1 Lye Len Annear Judy Bullock Natasha 2000 Len Lye Art Gallery of New South Wales ISBN 978 0 7347 6324 2 At first light the most iconic camera less photographs in pictures The Guardian 27 November 2015 Retrieved 4 July 2019 The global decline of the honey bee RNZ 2017 10 12 Retrieved 2019 07 04 Jule Walter 1997 Sightlines printmaking and image culture a collection of essays and images University of Alberta Press ISBN 978 0 88864 307 0 Ronduda Lukasz Zeyfang Florian 2007 1 2 3 avant gardes film art between experiment and archive Warsaw Sternberg Centre for Contemporary Art ISBN 978 83 85142 19 5 Baldassari Anne Picasso Pablo 1997 Picasso and photography The dark mirror Houston Flammarion ISBN 978 2 08 013646 6 Benteler Galleries 1983 Alexander Rodchenko Benteler Galleries Photogram with Nails Fotogramm mit Nageln The J Paul Getty in Los Angeles Retrieved 2019 07 04 Venn Beth Weinberg Adam D Fraser Kennedy 1999 Frames of reference looking at American art 1900 1950 works from the Whitney Museum of American Art London The Museum University of California Press ISBN 978 0 87427 111 9 The J Paul Getty Museum journal vol 23 J Paul Getty Museum 1995 p 106 ISSN 0362 1979 Galerie Zabriskie 2004 Zabriskie fifty years Ruder Finn Press ISBN 978 1 932646 15 3 Christian Schad Schadograph 1918 MoMA Retrieved 4 July 2019 Umland Anne Sudhalter Adrian Gerson Scott 2008 Dada in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art Museum of Modern Art ISBN 978 0 87070 668 4 Geimer Peter 2018 Inadvertent images A history of photographic apparitions translated by Jackson Gerrit The University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 47190 7 Schad Christian 2002 Christian Schad peintures dessins schadographies Schirmer Mosel ISBN 978 2 7118 4603 0 Review Greg Stimac Andrew Rafacz Gallery New City Art 19 June 2012 Retrieved 4 July 2019 Strindberg August Hedstrom Per 2001 Strindberg Painter and photographer Yale University Press p 188 ISBN 978 0 300 09187 8 Szalczer Eszter 2011 August Strindberg Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 41423 4 Soderberg R Munch E Strindberg A amp Teeland J 1989 Edvard Munch August Strindberg Fotografi som verktyg och experiment Photography as a tool and an experiment Stockholm Alfabeta Jager Gottfried Reese Beate Krauss Rolf H 2005 Konkrete fotografie Concrete photography Kerber Verlag ISBN 978 3 936646 74 0 Traces of by nature August Strindberg s photographic experiments of the 1890s IWM 2011 02 10 Retrieved 2019 07 06 The Print Time Life International 1972 Profile Kunie Sugiura This is Not a Photograph Carleton College 2001 Retrieved 4 July 2019 Schaaf Larry J Talbot William Henry Fox 1995 Sun pictures Catalogue seven Photogenic drawings by William Henry Fox Talbot Hans P Kraus Jr ISBN 978 0 9621096 5 2 Schaaf Larry J Talbot William Henry Fox 2000 The photographic art of William Henry Fox Talbot Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 05000 3 Talbot William Henry Fox Ollman Arthur Gray Michael McCusker Carol 2002 First photographs William Henry Fox Talbot and the birth of photography 1st ed PowerHouse Books ISBN 978 1 57687 153 9 Talbot William Henry Fox Roberts Russell 2000 Specimens and marvels William Henry Fox Talbot and the invention of photography 1st ed Aperture National Museum of Photography Film and Television ISBN 978 0 89381 932 3 Checklist of The Judith Rothschild Foundation Gift PDF Retrieved July 4 2019 Elsa Thiemann 1929 1931 Bauhaus student 100 Years of Bauhaus Bauhaus Kooperation Berlin Dessau Weimar 2019 Retrieved 4 July 2019 Celant Germano Maraniello Gianfranco 2008 Vertigo A century of multimedia art from futurism to the Web 1st ed Bologna New York Skira Museo d Arte Moderna di Bologna Rizzoli International Publications ISBN 978 88 6130 562 5 Veronesi Luigi Ballo Guido Fossati Paolo Bonini Giuseppe Ferrari Giuliana 1975 Luigi Veronesi Istituto di storia dell arte Baltzer Nanni 2015 Die Fotomontage im Faschistischen Italien Aspekte der Propaganda Unter Mussolini Berlin Boston De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 05 006098 9 Lipp Achim Zec Peter 1985 Mehr Licht Kunstlerhologramme und Lichtobjekte More light E Kabel ISBN 978 3 8225 0015 6 Art 35 Basel 16 21 6 04 the art show Hatje Cantz 2004 ISBN 978 3 7757 1371 9 Carter Keith October 2008 A certain alchemy 1st ed University of Texas Press published 2008 ISBN 978 0 292 71908 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Photogram amp oldid 1178897283, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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