Effects on Other Media

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Read this article to learn how photography changed how artists use two-dimensional media.

The photograph was now directly competing with drawing, painting, and printmaking. The camera turns its gaze on the human narrative that stands before it. The photograph gave (for the most part) a realistic and unedited view of our world. It offered a more "true" image of nature because it is manifest in light, not by the subjective hand and mind of the artist in their studio, which, depending on the style used, is open to manipulation. Its use as a tool for documentation was immediate, which gave the photo a scientific role to play.

Talbot's photogenic drawings of plant species became detailed documents for study, and the "freeze frame" photos of Eadweard Muybridge helped to understand human and animal movement. But the relative immediacy and improved clarity of the photographic image quickly pitted the camera against painting in the genre of portraiture. Before photography, painted portraits were afforded only to the wealthy and most prominent members of society. They became symbols of social class distinctions. Now portraits have become available to individuals and families from all social levels. Let's look at two examples from different mediums to compare and contrast.

Painted Portrait "Mrs. Oliver Brewster (Catherine Jones)," by Gilbert Stuart, 1815

Gilbert Stuart, Mrs. Oliver Brewster (Catherine Jones), 1815


Gilbert Stuart's painted portrait Mrs. Oliver Brewster (Catherine Jones) (1815) not only records the sitter's identity but also a psychological essence. There is a degree of informality in the work, as she leans forward in the chair, a shawl draped over one shoulder, hands clasped, with raised eyebrows and a slight smile on her lips. Her amusement is palpable and endearing.

In the photographic portrait of the English actress Ellen Terry, Julia Margaret Cameron captures the same informality and psychological complexities as Gilbert does, except this time the sitter leans against a patterned background, a simple white gown slips off her shoulders as she gently grasps a necklace with her right hand. Here the sitter's gaze is cast downward, unsmiling, in a moment of reflection or sadness. The lighting, coming from the right, is used to dramatic effect as it illuminates the left side of Terry's body but casts the right side in shadow.

Julia Margaret Cameron, 'Portrait of Ellen Terry', 1864. Carbon print. The Royal Photographic Society, United Kingdom

Julia Margaret Cameron, Portrait of Ellen Terry, 1864, carbon print. The Royal Photographic Society, United Kingdom


One obvious difference is the lack of color in Cameron's photo. Her use of black and white creates a graphic composition based on dramatic and subtle changes in value. The first color photographs were developed as early as the 1860s, but these early processes were impractical and of little value.

Painters worried that this new medium would spell the end of theirs. In reality, early photographers were influenced by popular painting styles in creating their own compositions. Cameron's staged photograph Queen Esther before King Ahasuerus from 1865 mimics the Symbolist paintings of the time in both style and subject matter. They used mythology, dramatic poses, and other Romantic themes to create visual worlds with dream-like figures and dark emotions. You can see the similarity between Cameron's photograph and George Frederic Watts' painting Paolo and Francesca from about the same time.

George Frederic Watts, 'Paolo and Francesca', c. 1865. Oil on canvas.

George Frederic Watts, Paolo and Francesca, c. 1865, oil on canvas


It did not take long for photographers to see the aesthetic value of the new medium. As early as 1844, Henry Talbot took pictures concerned with formal composition. The Open Door uses mundane subject matter to create a study in contrasts, visual balance, and textures. The solid composition, anchored by the dark rectangle of the door and interior space bookended by sunlit areas, becomes animated with diagonals created in the heavy shadow cast on the door. The broom's placement and its shadow reinforce this. Vines cropped on each side of the photo's frame give balance, and the broom straw, stonework, and door hardware create visual textures that enhance the effect. Finally, the lamp hanging near the right edge of the frame creates an accent that draws our eye.

Early photographs were made from single plates of metal, glass, or paper, each painstakingly prepared, exposed, and developed. In 1884 George Eastman invented transparent roll film, strips of celluloid coated with a light-sensitive emulsion. Four years later, he developed the first hand-held camera loaded with roll film. The combination brought access to photography within the reach of almost anyone. Additional advances were made in lens optics and shutter mechanics. By the turn of the 19th century, the photograph represented not only a new artistic medium but also a record and a symbol of the Industrial age itself.

If you want to read more about the history of photography as fine art, read this article. If you want to learn how photography affected other media, such as painting, drawing, and printmaking, read this article.


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Source: Christopher Gildow, http://opencourselibrary.org/art-100-art-appreciation/
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.

Last modified: Wednesday, February 14, 2024, 4:04 PM