Tuesday, February 3, 2015

PetaPixel: A Look Inside the World’s First Photo Book from 1843


Want to see what it’s like to flip through the first photo book that ever appeared in the world? The online show Objectivity recently paid a visit to The Royal Society in London to see its copy of Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions , a 1843 book by English botanist and photographer Anna Atkins that’s considered to be the first book ever to be illustrated exclusively with photographs.


The book's title page.

The book’s title page.



Only 17 copies of this book are known to exist in the world, and the Royal Society’s 403-page, 389-photo copy is thought to be “the only existing copy of the book as Atkins intended.” Other owners of this book include the British Library in London, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, and the New York Public Library.


Copies of this book sold for £133,500 (~$200,000) and £229,250 (~$350,000) at auctions in 1996 and 2004, respectively.


The photographs in the book aren’t standard photos captured with a camera, but rather cyanotypes (as the title suggests). Atkins placed the algae specimens directly onto photographic paper and then exposed the paper to light, creating silhouette photos of the algae once the paper is developed. Here are some of the photos in this famous book:


algae1


algae2


algae3


algae4


algae5


Because of these photos, Atkins is considered by some to be the world’s first female photographer.







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