The world in color.
by Hirsch, Robert
Afterimage • Jan-Feb, 2008 • A Century of Colour Photography: From the Autochrome to
the Digital Age
A CENTURY OF COLOUR PHOTOGRAPHY: FROM THE AUTOCHROME TO THE DIGITAL
AGE
BY PAMELA ROBERTS
LONDON: ANDRE DEUTSCH LTD, CARLTON PUBLISHING GROUP, 2007
256 PP./$39.00 (HB)
Marking the centennial of the commercial introduction of the
Lumiere brothers' autochrome process in 1907, Pamela Roberts,
former Curator at the Royal Photographic Society from 1982 to 2001, has
written a much-needed introduction to the underserved history of color
photography. A Century of Colour Photography: From the Autochrome to the
Digital Age presents the major technical and artistic happenings of the
held over the past one-hundred years plus a brief chapter about its
earlier developments.
The large-format pages (12-3/8 x 10-1/4 inches) feature a
straightforward design with good size reproductions on glossy stock,
offering unencumbered viewing of over three-hundred color plates.
However, the overall production values convey an atmosphere of
advertising rather than one of a scholarly endeavor. The reproduction
quality of some contemporary images, including those of Gregory Crewdson
and William Wegman, appear too cool, dark, and flat, and thus lose their
visual authority; and image information is not included under each
plate, necessitating flipping back and forth to the index of images by
photographers to locate each picture's title, date, size, and
process. Additionally, a more in-depth general index would have been
useful.
Production issues aside, Roberts delivers a significant general
survey of color photography by utilizing a decade-by-decade
chronological approach. There is a strong chapter on autochrome and its
alternatives, with coverage of Albert Kahn's The Archives of the
Planet, and the works of Leon Gimpel, Stephane Passet, and Edward
Steichen, who "never stopped experimenting with colour and his
autochromes, especially those of his sad-eyed daughter Mary--are amongst
the most beautiful ever taken." (1) Another chapter, "The
Colour Boom," covers the role popular magazines played in
stealthily interjecting the expectation of color photographs into their
productions. Photographers, such as Nicholas Muray, whose "work can
be terrifically kitsch in parts but also hugely confident and striking,
especially his portraits of women--his lover Frida Kahlo, and Judy
Garland and Marilyn Monroe," helped drive public acceptance of
color photography long before it was recognized by fashionable galleries
and museums.
Drawing on her years of curatorial experience, including collecting
autochromes and other early experimental color work, (2) Roberts's
solid picture research incorporates works from private collectors and
galleries. Besides the usual suspects like Eliot Porter, Joel
Meyerowitz, and Martin Parr, her scholarship allows readers to become
acquainted with seldom seen images, such as early autochromist Fred
Payne Clatworthy and overlooked Kodachrome practitioners like Saul
Leiter. This is vital as museum collections are often deficient in this
area because of their past reluctance to collect color images due to
archival concerns or their underestimation of color's artistic
importance.
Roberts's emphasis on previsualization, how the camera sees
and records color, results in a lack of coverage of the
postvisualization movements, how what the camera captures is just a
starting point for creative production. Although there are examples by
anonymous photographers, the snapshot genre, especially the 1963 Kodak
Instamatic that played a vital role in making color photography
ubiquitous, is given scant coverage.
Roberts does bring into view underserved women photographers, such
as Madame Yevonde, (3) a British color portrait and advertising
photographer from the 1930s who favored the British Vivex tricolor
carbro process to create a body of fantastical Surrealist-inspired work.
Roberts notes, "She has inspired others including Cindy Sherman and
now Jesse Landberg, a New York based filmmaker who is producing a
feature film on her for 2008." Other women involved in early color
photography, such as Sarah Angelina Acland, Violet Blaiklock, Gisele
Freund, Helen Messinger Murdoch, and Agnes B. Warburg, are also
represented.
Human color perception is a highly subjective and dynamically
changeable process. This is reflected in Roberts's own favorite
curatorial choices including John Batho for his "pure colour and
form" and the later Paul Outerbridge Mexican material for its
"extraordinary colour balance--so pure, lively, and intense. I
discovered quite a lot about my own colour awareness whilst researching
this book. Red was always my preferred colour but now I seem to be
obsessed by shades of green--perhaps it's an age thing?"
Roberts's project was not intended as a technical treatise.
This ground has been covered first by E.J. Wall, then Joseph S.
Friedman, and more recently by the late Brian Coe and Jack H. Coote.
Rather, Roberts puts forward an aesthetic history of color photography
that knowledgeably introduces key events, such as William
Eggleston's 1976 Museum of Modern Art exhibition that helped usher
color photography into the art world. Additional detailed coverage of
such events would have been welcome, especially in how societal changes
steered color photography in new directions.
Ultimately, Roberts supplies a much-needed entry point for people
desiring an overview of western color practice that is clearly written
without pretense or academic jargon. Roberts's book, completed in
only nine months, will perhaps inspire other historians and publishers
to delve more deeply into this neglected subject.
ROBERT HIRSCH's latest book, Light and Lens: Photography in
the Digital Age, is now available from Elsevier's Focal Press. His
visual and writing projects can be seen at www.lightresearch.net.
NOTES 1. All quotations by Pam Roberts are from emails with the
author and a meeting in Rochester, New York, on October 11, 2007. 2.
Through Roberts's efforts, the National Media Museum in Bradford,
UK, the current home of the former RPS collection, has one of the
world's finest public autochrome collections. 3. With Robin Gibson
of the National Portrait Gallery in London, Roberts organized an
exhibition and wrote a book, Madame Yevonde (1990).
COPYRIGHT 2008 Visual Studies
Workshop Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.