Currently not on view

Loch Katrine,

1844

William Henry Fox Talbot, British, 1800–1877
1998-47
Photography was invented twice in 1839. Soon after Louis-Jacques Mandé Daguerre demonstrated his metal-plate process in Paris, William Henry Fox Talbot secured an English patent for fixing images on paper. Talbot called his medium the calotype (from the Greek kalos, or beautiful), and it proved to be the prototype for all subsequent negative-based processes, including those employing glass (1850) and film (1889). The grain in Talbot's paper negatives imparted effects that included a softened focus and rather harsh tonal contrasts. In his serial publication The Pencil of Nature (1844) and in the album Sun Pictures in Scotland (1845), he demonstrated the picturesque potential of these eff ects with still lifes, architectural details, and landscapes, such as this view of the setting for Sir Walter Scott's poem The Lady of the Lake (1810).

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Handbook Entry

Information

Title
Loch Katrine
Dates

1844

Medium
Salted paper print
Dimensions
image: 17.3 x 21.1 cm. (6 13/16 x 8 5/16 in.) sheet: 18.6 x 22.6 cm. (7 5/16 x 8 7/8 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Surdna Fund, in honor of Peter C. Bunnell
Object Number
1998-47
Place Depicted

Europe, Scotland, Loch Katrine

Inscription
Inscribed in graphite in unknown hand, verso lower left corner: X2707 Inscribed in ink in unknown hand, verso lower right corner: LA35
Reference Numbers
Schaaf 2787
Culture