Jean Baptiste Camille Corot , The Young Woman and Death, 1854 (printed 1921).

Featured on PDR in the essay Cliché-Verre and Friendship in 19th-Century France

In the 1850s, as photography took its first steps toward commercial reproducibility, a more intimate use for light-sensitive plates briefly bloomed. It had a few names: heliographic drawing, photographic autography, or, as it is best known today, cliché-verre. Miya Tokumitsu takes us to the towns and forests of France where a group of friends began making marks on photographic plates, and finds their camaraderie cohere in lyrical arrangements of topography and light.

The Young Woman and Death

Artist

Date

1854


Underlying Rights

Public Domain Worldwide

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights


Image Size

848 x 1024 Higher res available?

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