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*[http://www.ssplprints.com/thumbnails.php?collid=1184&ref=wiki&ad=sspl04 The official National Media Museum print website] containing many Peter Henry Emerson prints
*[http://www.ssplprints.com/thumbnails.php?collid=1184&ref=wiki&ad=sspl04 The official National Media Museum print website] containing many Peter Henry Emerson prints
*[http://www.geh.org/ne/mismi2/emerson_sld00001.html Gallery of Emerson's works]
*[http://www.geh.org/ne/mismi2/emerson_sld00001.html Gallery of Emerson's works]
* {{cite web |publisher= [[Victoria and Albert Museum]]
|url= http://www.vam.ac.uk/vastatic/microsites/photography/photographerframe.php?photographerid=ph021
|title= Peter Henry Emerson
|work=Photography
|accessdate= 2007-11-11}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Emerson, Peter Henry}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Emerson, Peter Henry}}

Revision as of 15:44, 25 November 2007

Peter Henry Emerson (18561936) was a Cuban-born photographer. His photographs are early examples of promoting photography as an art form. He is known for taking photographs that displayed natural settings.

Emerson was born in Cuba to a British mother and an American father. He spent most of his youth in New England. He moved to England in 1869 and went to Cambridge University, where he earned his medical degree in 1885. The next year, he abandoned his career as a surgeon and became a photographer and writer. He made many pictures of rural life in the East Anglian fenlands. He published eight books of his work through the next ten years, but did not release anything else after the turn of the century. He died in Falmouth in 1936.

During his life Emerson fought against the British Photographic establishment and its manipulation of many photographs to produce one image. This work was especially undertaken and promoted by Henry Peach Robinson. Some of his photographs were of twenty or more separate photographs combined to produce one image. Emerson said this was false and his pictures were taken in a single shot.

Emerson also believed that the photograph should be a true representation of that which the eye saw. This led him to produce one area of sharp focus in his pictures the remainder being unsharp. This he believed mimicked the eye's way of seeing. The effect was for a picture that remains up-to-date when compared to the constructed all over sharp production a la Robinson school. This was an argument he pursued vehemently and to the discomfort of the Photographic establishment. Emerson and the establishment squared up like two bulls.

Emerson also believed with a passion that photography was an art and not a mechanical reproduction. The same argument with the establishment ensued but Emerson found that his defence failed and he had to allow that Photography was probably a mechanical reproduction. The pictures the Robinson school produced were mechanical but Emerson's still remain artistic not being a faithful reproduction of a scene but having depth due to his one plane sharp therory. When he lost the argument over Art of Photography he did not publicise his Photography but continued to take photographs. A strange ending for a photographer whose pictures endorsed his argument so eloquently.

To have a graphic illustration of the principles outlined in this section you have to see an Emerson print. Please make an effort to do so as a key to this article (the originals are better than the reproductions herein but those shown give a flavour).

References

  • The official National Media Museum print website containing many Peter Henry Emerson prints
  • Gallery of Emerson's works
  • "Peter Henry Emerson". Photography. Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 2007-11-11.