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For more information on Henry Peach Robinson, visit Britannica.com.
| Photography Encyclopedia: Henry Peach Robinson |
Robinson, Henry Peach (1830-1901), English photographer, born in Ludlow, Shropshire. Apprenticed to a printer and bookseller, he took up photography after seeing the Great Exhibition of 1851. From 1857 to 1864 he operated a portrait studio in Leamington Spa, but scaled back business due to ill health. Inspired by O. G. Rejlander's The Two Ways of Life (1857), he exhibited elaborate combination prints of genre subjects such as the controversial deathbed scene, Fading Away (1858), and Pre-Raphaelite narratives like The Lady of Shalott (1860-1). Robinson published extensively on photographic aesthetics, arguing for photography as a ‘pictorial’ art, transformed from mechanical transcription through the application of the conventions of academic painting. He believed that, like other art forms, the photograph could bear the marks of its maker, with its own visual qualities and expressive modes. In this, he was more in sympathy with the next generation of photographers, such as Alfred Maskell and George Davison, with whom he founded the Linked Ring Brotherhood in 1892. He exhibited at the Ring's Photographic Salon until 1900.
— Hope Kingsley
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| Wikipedia: Henry Peach Robinson |
Henry Peach Robinson (9 July 1830 in Ludlow, Shropshire – 21 February 1901) was an English Pictorialist photographer best known for his pioneering combination printing - joining multiple negatives to form a single image, the precursor to photomontage. Oscar Gustave Rejlander of Wolverhampton was however, the first to establish this art in 1857, a year earlier than Robinson.
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Robinson was the eldest of the four children of John Robinson, a Ludlow schoolmaster, and his wife Eliza. He was educated at Horatio Russell's academy in Ludlow until he was thirteen, when he took a year's drawing tuition with Richard Penwarne before being apprenticed to a Ludlow bookseller and printer, Richard Jones.
While continuing to study art, his initial career was in bookselling, in 1850 working for the Bromsgrove bookseller Benjamin Maund, then in 1851 for the London-based Whittaker & Co. In 1852 he exhibited an oil painting, On the Teme Near Ludlow, at the Royal Academy. That same year he began taking photographs, and five years later, following a meeting with the photographer Hugh Welch Diamond, decided to devote himself to that medium, in 1855 opening a studio in Leamington Spa, selling portraits.
In 1856, with Rejlander, he was a founding member of the Birmingham Photographic Society.
In 1859 he married Selina Grieves, daughter of a Ludlow chemist, John Edward Grieves.
In 1864, at the age of thirty-four, Robinson was forced to give up his studio due to ill-health from exposure to toxic photographic chemicals. Gernsheim (1962) has shown that thereafter he preferred the easier 'scissors and paste-pot' method of making his combination prints, rather than the more exacting darkroom method employed by Rejlander.
Relocating to London, Robinson kept up his involvement with the theoretical side of photography, writing the influential essay Pictorial Effect in Photography, Being Hints on Composition and Chiaroscuro for Photographers, published in 1868. Around this time his health had improved sufficiently to open a new studio in Tunbridge Wells with Nelson King Cherrill, and in 1870 he become vice-president of the Royal Photographic Society. He advocated strongly for photography to be regarded as an art form.
The partnership with Cherrill dissolved in 1875, Robinson continuing the business until his retirement in 1888. Following internal disputes within the Photographic Society, he resigned in 1891 to become one of the early members of the rival Linked Ring society, in which he was active until 1900, when he was also elected an honorary member of the Royal Photographic Society.
Robinson was an early supporter of the Photographic Convention of the United Kingdom and took part in this institutions long running debates about photography as an art form[1]. He was invited to serve as the President of the PCUK in 1891 but, as he described later, 'I felt compelled to decline, knowing that I could not carry out the duties as they should be carried out, having a defect of voice which would not allow me to read my own address'. He was subsequently persuaded to serve as President in 1896, when his presidential speeches were read out by a colleague.[2].
He died and was buried in Tunbridge Wells in early 1901.
One of the most prominent art photographers of his day, he is now often considered conventional, even academic. His first and the most famous composite picture, "Fading Away" (1858) was both popular and fashionably morbid. He was a follower of the pre-Raphaelites and was influenced by the aesthetic views of John Ruskin. In his Pre-Raphaelite phase he attempted to realise moments of timeless significance in a "mediaeval" setting, anticipating the work of Julia Margaret Cameron, Burne-Jones and the Symbolists. According to his letters, he was also influenced by the paintings of J.M.W. Turner. j [foiasf
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